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Tocqueville's Idea of Revolution and DH. Lawrence's The Rainbow: A Study of Social Change and The Liberation of Women

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Abstract (2. Language): 
As a modern novelist, D.H. Lawrence is not interested in the portrayal of individuals possessing a conventional moral and psychological mind within a certain moral scheme. In The Rainbow, he uses the Industrial Revolution as a predominant feature and urges a spiritual revolution within the females, to liberate the mind from its materialist chain and conventional gender roles. The concept of the revolution can be interpreted in the light of Alexis Tocqueville's ideas.
Abstract (Original Language): 
Modern dönem roman yazarı olarak D.H. Lawrence alışılagelmis ahlaki ve sosyal normlar icindeki karakter analizleriyle ilgilenmez. Gökkuşağı adlı romanında, endüstri devrimini romanın vazgeçilmez bir ögesi olarak kullanan romancı, karakterlerini dönemin getirdigi maddiyatcı zihniyetten ve geleneksel cinsiyet rollerinden kurtarmak icin özellikle kadın karakterler arasında başkaldırı unsurunu kullanmıştır. Bu başkaldırı terimi, Alexis Tocqueville'in bakış açısıyla incelenebilir..
191-204

REFERENCES

References: 

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. (1998), The Old Regime and the French Revolution. Trans. Alan S. Kahan.
(1856).Eds. Francois Furet and Francoise Melino. V.1. Chicago and London: U of Chicago Press.
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Tocqueville's Idea of Revolution and D.H. Lawrence's The Rainbow: A Study of Social Change and The Liberation of Women
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