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Dh Lawrence
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D. H. Lawrence is one of the most studied British modernist writers, and students encounter his work across literature, cultural studies, and writing courses at both secondary and university levels. His novels, short stories, and poetry raise enduring questions about desire, class, industrialization, and human psychology, making him a rich subject for academic analysis. Works such as Women in Love, The Rainbow, The Rocking Horse Winner, and The Horse Dealer's Daughter appear frequently in syllabi precisely because they resist simple interpretation and reward close reading.

Student papers on Lawrence tend to pursue several distinct angles. Literary analysis of symbolism is common, particularly in shorter fiction like The Rocking Horse Winner, where recurring motifs around money, luck, family, and death carry psychological weight. Comparative essays set two Lawrence texts against each other or place his work alongside other authors, examining how themes of love, maternal relationships, and social pressure function across different narratives. Papers on Women in Love and The Rainbow often take a broader thematic or modernist framework, situating Lawrence within the wider concerns of early twentieth-century literature.

A strong essay on Lawrence begins with a focused, arguable thesis rather than a general claim about his importance as a writer. The most persuasive papers ground their arguments in specific textual evidence — close readings of scene, image, and dialogue — rather than plot summary. One common pitfall is treating Lawrence's characters as straightforward mouthpieces for his views; effective analysis maintains a distinction between authorial perspective and narrative voice, which keeps the argument analytical rather than biographical.

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Paper Doctorate
Setting of a Story Can Reveal Important
This essay examines the settings of "The Lottery" and "The Rocking-Horse Winner" in order to demonstrate how each story's setting contributes to their respective critiques of society. By placing "The Rocking-Horse Winner" in a middle class neighborhood, D.H. Lawrence demonstrates the danger of deference to arbitrary notions of social status. Similarly, by setting "The Lottery" in a kind of Anytown, USA, Shirley Jackson is able to critique blind allegiance to religious and political ideology without limiting the impact of her critique to a single location.
Paper Undergraduate
J.M. Berrie\'s Peter Pan --
J.M. Berrie's Peter Pan -- A Review of Methodologies
Paper Undergraduate
Benjamin Franklin Established the Model
Benjamin Franklin Established the Model for the American Self-Made Man in His
Paper Doctorate
Literary analysis of "The Rocking Horse Winner" and "The Lottery
An Analysis of "Luck" in "The Lottery" and "The Rocking Horse Winner"
Paper Undergraduate
Female Ways of Identity Shaping
This ironic and even cryptic title of Buchi Emecheta's book is as far from the substance of her narrative as Africa is from Germany. What the book does convey with passion and realism is that motherhood in this African…
Paper Undergraduate
D. H. Lawrence's Women in Love
Of all of DH Lawrences's complex analyses of the human mind, of the relationships that are formed between different people and the psychologies associated with these relationships, "Women in Love" is the most renowned…
Research Paper Doctorate
Young, so Gifted so Old:
The Rocking Horse Winner" by DH Lawrence, "Suicide Note" by Janice Mirikitani, and "The Cuban Swimmer" by Milcha Sanchez-Scott are three different genres of fiction grappling with a similar problem: a young protagonist…
Paper Undergraduate
Tenets Lawrence and Derek Walcott:
The tenets of modernist literature and poetry respectively, wrote in such a manner that stood in opposition to the perceived excesses of poetry that emphasized tradition in form and grandiose diction. Those modernist poets wrote in a way that brought poetry to the layperson in terms they could understand, and spoke revolution in poetic form. Following is a comparative analysis of the tenets of modernism in the writings of Modernist poets D. H. Lawrence and Derek Walcott.
Paper Undergraduate
D. H. Lawrence's Women in Love: themes and analysis
Ben-Ephraim, Gaviel. "The Teller Reasserted: Exercisings of the Will in Women in Love." In the Moon's Dominion: Narrative Dichotomy and Female Dominance
Paper Doctorate
Jackson and Lawrence the Theme of Sacrifice
This paper looks at how D. H. Lawrence and Shirley Jackson use the theme of sacrifice in their respective short stories, "The Rocking-Horse Winner" and "The Lottery." Both authors have an express purpose in using the theme--Lawrence to show the power of sacrifice and Jackson to show what happens when a culture abandons the Christian notion of sacrifice.