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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Harry ActonPublisher: Edinburgh University Press Imprint: Edinburgh University Press ISBN: 9781399538251ISBN 10: 139953825 Pages: 216 Publication Date: 31 May 2025 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Not yet available ![]() This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsReviewsIn the Introduction to this engaging, well-researched and well-written book, Acton insists that we concentrate on D. H. Lawrence as an autodidact and a reader committed to finding effective critical expression for an openness to embodied feeling that characterises his modernist narratives. There is much to be excited about in this book. Often some of the most refreshing aspects of the argument are provided when the focus is on strategies in Lawrence's fiction that fail, or that push positively against inherited limits, stimulating Acton's discussion of a Levinasian dimension to new forms of embodied feeling emerging from social displacement and oppression, not least in The Rainbow inflected, as Acton argues, by the kind of reader of Thomas Hardy that Lawrence became. Also striking is how Acton repositions Lawrence's essay 'Studies in Classic American Literature' as a key text in approaching the complex and unstable relation between human and nonhuman bodies in his work, something that Lawrence found first in his reading of representations of nature in American literature. The book's Coda gives a cogent account of Lawrence's essays on the novel form to argue for Lawrence's emphasis on the entanglements of the reading self with other beings, something that the volume maintains from the outset without falling into the pitfalls of over-simplification, generalisation or untested speculation. The Embodied Reader in D.H. Lawrence's Criticism and Fiction: Reading, Feeling and Modernist Form is an important contribution to debates on Lawrence, modernism and radical materialist aesthetics.--Fiona Becket, University of Leeds Author InformationHarry Acton is an Associate Lecturer at Birkbeck, University of London. He has written on Lawrence's materialist ecological aesthetics in the D. H. Lawrence Review and is a contributor to the forthcoming collection Reading D. H. Lawrence in the Anthropocene, edited by Terry Gifford. His current research explores the ecological significance of embodied responses to narrative. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |