Repository | Book | Chapter

(2013) Self-consciousness in modern British fiction, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.
Removing the serpent's tail from its mouth
D. H. Lawrence's vision of embodied consciousness
Brook Miller
pp. 113-135
Ghiselin's pronouncement about D. H. Lawrence highlights an aspect of Lawrence's thinking closely related to the themes of this book: Lawrence's profound interest in the totality of consciousness and the material and experiential strata which generate it. Lawrence railed against reductive representations of consciousness. In this chapter, I trace how Lawrence's belief in dynamic, embodied consciousness manifests in his essays and last long novel. I hope to contribute to a partial reconciliation of Lawrence's polemics against the modernist novel with the similarities between his models of embodied consciousness and those articulated by the very modernists he dispraised.
Publication details
Full citation:
Miller, B. (2013). Removing the serpent's tail from its mouth: D. H. Lawrence's vision of embodied consciousness, in Self-consciousness in modern British fiction, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 113-135.
This document is unfortunately not available for download at the moment.