D.H. Lawrence and the Question of American Literature
March 11
Jonathan Ivry, associate professor and chair, Literature, Writing, and Film
What does it mean to read D.H. Lawrence’s Studies in Classic American Literature today, a hundred years after its composition? Does this book, hailed by several generations of literary critics as itself a classic study of American literature, still have relevance? No dry, sober piece of literary criticism, Lawrence’s study is full of bold, even outrageous claims about the American experience and the writers of the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries who sought to capture that experience. This presentation will revisit the life and career of D.H. Lawrence, his controversial legacy, and the question of what constitutes American literature today.
Lectures will be held on Mondays at 3 p.m. in the Olm Fellowship Hall of Fairhaven Senior Services, 435 West Starin Road, Whitewater. They are open to the public and registration is not required. Lectures may be recorded and posted to our Fairhaven Lecture website and YouTube channel. Videos of lectures in this series and in past series can be accessed for free any time after they are posted online.
Follow us on social media for more information. Any other questions, please contact Kari Borne at bornek@uww.edu or 262-472-1003.