Faculté des Lettres et des Langues étrangères
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Browsing Faculté des Lettres et des Langues étrangères by Author "Roumaissa Moussaoui"
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Item Mapping D. H. Lawrence’s Apocalypse: The path of prophecy through his fictional and non fictional works(University of 20th August 1955-Skikda, 2018) Roumaissa MoussaouiThis thesis, entitled Mapping D. H. Lawrence’s Apocalypse: The path of prophecy through his fictional and non fictional works, aims at showing how Lawrence’s novels, The Rainbow, Women in Love and The Virgin and the Gypsy are a working out of his singular vision and lead up to the composition of his Apocalypse, which can be considered as the crystallization of his philosophy as a whole. The following research will show how his original holistic conception of life enabled him to create a totally new and dynamic form of expression in keeping with this philosophy. His primary aim, to create a new and appropriate language for feelings, pushed him to break with literary convention, experiment with style and re-interpret well-established symbols in a new and totally innovative way. His specific symbols and myths will be isolated to show not only their importance but also how they are intrinsic parts or functional elements of what is Lawrence’s moral philosophy. To this extent, Apocalypse can be seen as both a point of departure and a culmination of his creative endeavour. Disillusioned with Freudian theories of the personality, he set out to liberate man by formulating his own personal vision. Through an examination of both his fictional and non-fictional works, we will reveal the paradox of his creative thought. Namely, that the answer to the present turmoil lies in the simplicity of the past. It will be shown how Lawrence discredited civilization, with its emphasis on mind and reason, seeing it as responsible for its own nihilistic state. His answer, to strip away layers of dogma and creed to find a basic kernel of truth linking man’svi happiness to the cosmos, is a message which is as pertinent today as it was in the turbulent times before his death in 1930.