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Los Brangwen

Esta extensa saga narra los altibajos de varias generaciones de una familia arraigada en el campo inglés. Las obras profundizan en relaciones complejas, particularmente las románticas y conyugales, explorando las vidas interiores de los personajes con una profunda perspicacia psicológica. El autor enfatiza la experiencia emocional y la evolución de las dinámicas interpersonales, empleando a menudo detalles naturalistas para exponer deseos y conflictos ocultos.

Women in Love
The Rainbow

Orden recomendado de lectura

  1. 1

    The Rainbow

    • 480 páginas
    • 17 horas de lectura

    The Rainbow - By D. H. Lawrence - Complete New Edition. The Rainbow is a 1915 novel by British author D. H. Lawrence. It follows three generations of the Brangwen family living in Nottinghamshire, particularly focusing on the individual's struggle to growth and fulfilment within the confining strictures of English social life. The Rainbow tells the story of three generations of the Brangwen family, a farm/ labouring dynasty who live in the East Midlands of England near Nottingham. The book spans a period of roughly 65 years from the 1840s to 1905, and shows how the love relationships of the Brangwens change against the backdrop of the increasing industrialisation of Britain. The first central character, Tom Brangwen, is a labourer whose experience of the world does not stretch beyond Nottinghamshire; while the last, Ursula, his granddaughter, studies at University and becomes a teacher in the progressively urbanised, capitalist and industrial world that would become our modern experience.

    The Rainbow
  2. 2

    "Seen by Lawrence as his most accomplished book, but subject to the initial prudery and incomprehension that met most of his fiction, Women in Love examines the regenerative and destructive aspects of human passion, as illustrated by its depiction of Ursula and Gudrun Brangwen - who first appeared in The Rainbow - and their relationships with Gerald Crich and Rupert Birkin. Set against the backdrop of a world consuming itself in war, the novel creates an instructive vision of humanity's dance with life and death." "This text is the famous "first" Women in Love, the unexpurgated version preferred by Lawrence himself, which was rejected by every publisher because of the banning of The Rainbow in 1915. More positive in tone than the revised version published in his lifetime, with different central relationships and a radically different ending, it is now viewed by many as Lawrence's masterpiece."--BOOK JACKET.

    Women in Love