Books : Studies in Classic American Literature (The Cambridge Edition of the Works of D. H. Lawrence)

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Author name: D. H. Lawrence

 : Studies in Classic American Literature (The Cambridge Edition of the Works of D. H. Lawrence)
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Type of bind: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 810.9
EAN num: 9780521550161
ISBN number: 0521550165
Label: Cambridge University Press
Manufacturer: Cambridge University Press
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 712
Printing Date: January 27, 2003
Publishing house: Cambridge University Press
Sale Popularity Level: 1337023
Studio: Cambridge University Press




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Product Description:
First published in 1923, this anthology provides a cross-section of Lawrence's writing on American literature. It includes landmark essays on Benjamin Franklin, Fenimore Cooper, Edgar Allan Poe, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Herman Melville and Walt Whitman. The volume offers the final 1923 version of the text in a newly corrected and uncensored form, and earlier (often very different) versions of many of the essays, and other materials (including four versions of Lawrence's pioneering essay on Whitman).



Customer Reviews
User popularity level:  out of 5 stars

Rated by buyers 5 out of 5 stars - hidden treasure
delightful. the essay on moby dick alone is worth the read. has stayed fresh in my memories for over 20 years. lawrence may have been sobering out in taos, but his genuis was burning bright. remember, the works he was praising were not yet completely "canonical." lawrence was a key signpost. vivid and sensitive, imagistic appreciations.



Rated by buyers 4 out of 5 stars - Sweatin' To The Oldies with D.H. Lawrence
There are three reasons to read STUDIES IN CLASSIC AMERICAN LITERATURE by D.H. Lawrence. First: to better understand Lawrence and his themes. Second: to be entertained. Criticism is rarely rendered with so much passion, wit and clarity. Third: to experience American culture from an outsider's perspective, a very knowledgeable though albeit highly opinionated perspective (which makes for that entertainment value).

DHL's prevailing theory is that to emerge as a distinct cultural, as well as distinct political entity free from Europe, America had to go through some growing pains before arriving at its authentic self. America had to kill off the European in its heart. He starts out with Ben Franklin, whom he gives a real trouncing for the overly self-conscious act of assigning an American character with a shopping list of virtues. (It should come as no surprise that DHL especially has trouble with "chastity.") Ben may be generating a fake, a lie, but he marks the beginning of an effort to break with the old homeland, Europe. Hector St. John de Crevecoeur is subsequent in line for a beating. He moved his unfortunate family to the frontier, wrote the letters glowing with the accounts of the American Dream amongst the nature and the "savages" and then went back to France to revel in literary salons. When he returned, the wife and farm had met brutal ends in that American dream in which he had left them, so he settled in New York City. DHL screams, "Fake!" But Crevecoeur did announce the concept of an ideal tied to the unique attributes of the new world.

DHL takes us through Cooper, Poe and Hawthorne, who begin to make progress (and also give DHL space to expound in ways that have annoyed his feminist critics), and onto Dana (TWO YEARS BEFORE THE MAST) and Melville, who go to sea to find themselves and their American consciousness. It is Melville who smashes the old mold forever and makes way for Whitman to plow through with a new road, singing that song of self.

We get the tour of the past; we get, obliquely, a tour of post World War I intellectual preoccupations; and we get DHL being DHL at full throttle.




Rated by buyers 4 out of 5 stars - Always interesting but often wrong
This passionate brief survey of American Literature contains much spontaneous flowing masterful and original writing. Lawrence famous 'Trust the teller not the tale' is the motto of the work. It argues that the true creative work takes on a life of its own that even its creator cannot completely define and control.
Perhaps the most famous essay in this book is Lawrence's hatchet- job of Ben Franklin who he found to be a spiteful, penny- pinching, calculating dead soul. In fact old Ben could be in certain places as lively and probably more lively than Lawrence himself.
What however is most important is that Lawrence in this work understands the great subterranean and mysterious genius of a kindred spirit for him, the literary creator of the Great White Whale.



Rated by buyers 5 out of 5 stars - Trust the teller along with the tale
This is a small book yet Lawrence's genius enables him to see big things in it, especially about those large writers like Melville he felt an affinity to. "Trust the tale and not the teller" is one of his motto's here and he tries to show how the great works go beyond the intentions of their creators.
One objection. He is especially hard on Franklin who he makes into a priggish, petty prune of a minor moralist. Franklin was a many - sided genius who was open to kind of creation Lawrence had no sense of.



Rated by buyers 5 out of 5 stars - American Genius Loci
Useful book to understand America.
Terrific.
And there's more to come....

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