ABSTRACT

This book opens out a wholly new field of enquiry within a familiar subject: it offers a detailed – yet eminently readable – historical investigation, of a kind never yet undertaken, of the impact of psychoanalysis (at a crucial moment of its history) on the thinking and writing of D.H. Lawrence. It considers the impact on his writing, through his relationship with Frieda Weekley, of the maverick Austrian analyst Otto Gross; it situates the great works of 1911-20 in relation to the controversial issues at stake in the Freud-Jung quarrel, about which his good friend, the English psychoanalyst David Eder, kept him informed; and it explores his sympathy with the maverick American analyst Trigant Burrow. It is a study to interest a literary audience by its close reading of Lawrence’s texts, and a psychoanalytic audience by its detailed consideration of the contribution made to contemporary debate by three comparatively neglected analytic thinkers.

chapter 1|30 pages

The ‘New Ethic’ of Otto Gross

chapter 2|34 pages

Sons and Lovers

Triangles of Antagonism

chapter 3|45 pages

The Rainbow

Oedipus Unbound

chapter 4|41 pages

Women in Love

Death of the Father

chapter 5|44 pages

Mapping the Bodily Unconscious

chapter 6|44 pages

Aaron’s Rod

Lawrence’s Studies on Hysteria

chapter |12 pages

Conclusion

In Search of the True Self: Trigant Burrow and Lawrence (1925–28)