Nottingham
Lawrence Studies
Talking
Lawrence: Patterns of Eastwood dialect in the work of D. H. Lawrence
~ Two
Lawrence Plays
~ "Art
for Life's Sake": Essays on D. H. Lawrence
~ Working
with Lawrence: Texts, Places, Contexts
~ Experiments:
Lectures on Lawrence
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"Art
for Life's Sake": essays on D. H. Lawrence
Keith Sagar has produced over fifty years a stream of essays, introductions and lectures on Lawrence, fourteen of which are collected here. Four have not been previously published, and this collection brings most of others back into print. Of Keith Sagar's first book, The Art of D. H. Lawrence (1966), Vivian de Sola Pinto wrote that it marked the start of serious Lawrence scholarship in England. Alastair Niven described Sagar's Calendar of Lawrence's works (1979) as 'indispensable, fascinating and almost certainly as authoritative a literary calendar as we could expect for any writer'. John Worthen described The Life of D. H. Lawrence (1980) as 'the best single-volume biography of Lawrence'. Keith Brown, reviewing D. H. Lawrence: Life into Art in the Times Literary Supplement in 1985 wrote: 'Criticism of Dr Sagar's book is well-nigh impossible. It is clearly going to be there as long as formal Lawrence studies survive'. Of his latest book, D. H. Lawrence: Poet (2008), Christopher Pollnitz wrote: 'Keith Sagar has done more than any other critic to reshape understanding of Lawrence as poet.' |
Keith Sagar was educated at Bradford Grammar School and King's, Cambridge. Formerly Reader in English Literature at Manchester University, he is now a Special Professor in the School of English at Nottingham University. He is the author/editor of over twenty books. His most important book, on which he worked for over thirty years, is Literature and the Crime Against Nature (2005), which covers sixteen major authors from Homer to Ted Hughes. View the front and end papers of this title (PDF, 277Kb) RETAIL DETAIL
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