Mapping Identity in D.H. Lawrence's Short Stories - A Discursive Analysis

Stok Kodu:
9786051968087
Boyut:
13.5x21.5
Sayfa Sayısı:
240
Baskı:
1
Basım Tarihi:
2022-06
Kapak Türü:
Ciltsiz
Kağıt Türü:
2. Hamur
%25 indirimli
120,00TL
90,00TL
Taksitli fiyat: 1 x 90,00TL
Tedarikçi Stoğu 5 Adet
9786051968087
706288
Mapping Identity in D.H. Lawrence's Short Stories - A Discursive Analysis
Mapping Identity in D.H. Lawrence's Short Stories - A Discursive Analysis
90.00

Although D. H. Lawrence has always been one of the most debated authors of Modern English Literature with his several novels, his short fiction opened new horizons for the modern short story genre. Lawrence, one of England's first modernist short story writers, wrote more than fifty short stories during his 45-year lifetime. This study explores the relation between discourse, ideology and power in the process of identity formation in the selected six short stories of D. H. Lawrence: "The Prussian Officer", "The Princess", "Mother and Daughter", "The Horse Dealer's Daughter", "Tickets, Please" and "Sun". It aims to reveal how patriarchal discourses - institutional, familial and marital - function as ideological state apparatuses to produce certain subjects from the Althusserian view and how power is always present in discursive practices from the Foucauldian perspective. Therefore, this study sheds light on Lawrence's stance as an anarchic author and what constitutes the Lawrentian discourse as a modernist reflection.

Although D. H. Lawrence has always been one of the most debated authors of Modern English Literature with his several novels, his short fiction opened new horizons for the modern short story genre. Lawrence, one of England's first modernist short story writers, wrote more than fifty short stories during his 45-year lifetime. This study explores the relation between discourse, ideology and power in the process of identity formation in the selected six short stories of D. H. Lawrence: "The Prussian Officer", "The Princess", "Mother and Daughter", "The Horse Dealer's Daughter", "Tickets, Please" and "Sun". It aims to reveal how patriarchal discourses - institutional, familial and marital - function as ideological state apparatuses to produce certain subjects from the Althusserian view and how power is always present in discursive practices from the Foucauldian perspective. Therefore, this study sheds light on Lawrence's stance as an anarchic author and what constitutes the Lawrentian discourse as a modernist reflection.

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