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Featured researches published by Andrew Harrison.


Archive | 2014

Urban Spaces, Fragmented Consciousness, and Indecipherable Meaning in Mrs Dalloway

Andrew Harrison

Virginia Woolf’s Mrs Dalloway begins with the image of opening doors, immediately connecting the spatial with the temporal, as the middle-aged Clarissa’s voyage out into the streets of Westminster on a bright morning in mid-June 1923 invokes the parallel time-frame in which her eighteen-year-old self opened the French windows at Bourton on a similar June day in 1889, plunging into the fresh country air. Inside her house, the rooms are being prepared for her evening party, with the doors taken off their hinges, while outside she walks the city streets to Mulberry’s florist shop, where she will buy flowers to round off the preparations. The vivid spatial image of swinging hinges, and of thresholds crossed, is inseparable from the temporal process of remembering; in fact, the process of crossing and re-crossing thresholds works on both levels, as Clarissa crosses Victoria Street, walking through St James’s Park into Piccadilly and along Bond Street, moving between scenes of urban bustle with a brief rural interlude, just as she anticipates Peter Walsh’s imminent arrival at her party by recalling certain hurtful phrases he had uttered at Bourton. Her mind moves with her body from a feeling of satisfied elation at the early summer morning to the sombre remembrance of past experience and its associated feelings of dissatisfaction, and back to the present moment, as she pushes through the swing doors of the florist shop.


Katherine Mansfield Studies | 2012

Ambivalence, Language and the Uncanny in Katherine Mansfield's In a German Pension

Andrew Harrison

This essay uses an observation on the strangeness of language in the opening section of Freuds essay ‘Das Unheimliche’ to describe the unsettling effects created by the stories in Mansfields first collection, In A German Pension. It relates the formal ambivalence of the stories to their thematic concern with deception and self-deception, insinuation and suspicion, showing how the reader is troublingly implicated in the processes of speculation and intrusion foregrounded in the narratives. The essay concludes by concentrating on Mansfields technical concern with the disconcerting slippage of meaning between languages and the uncanny potential of mixed languages, erratic voices and ambiguous expressions.


Archive | 2005

D.H. Lawrence's sons and lovers : a casebook

John Worthen; Andrew Harrison


Archive | 2003

D.H. Lawrence and Italian Futurism: A Study of Influence

Andrew Harrison


The Review of English Studies | 2018

D.H. Lawrence, Rananim and Gilbert Cannan’s Windmills

Andrew Harrison


Archive | 2017

“A new continent of the soul”: D.H. Lawrence, Porthcothan and the necessary fiction of Cornwall

Andrew Harrison


Archive | 2016

The Life of D. H. Lawrence: A Critical Biography

Andrew Harrison


Notes and Queries | 2014

The Date of Composition of D. H. Lawrence’s ‘Laura Philippine’

Andrew Harrison


Archive | 2014

I tell you it has got form - form: plot, structure, and meaning in Sons and Lovers

Andrew Harrison


Archive | 2014

Further letters of D.H. Lawrence

John Worthen; Andrew Harrison

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