@article{oai:miyazaki-mu.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000816, author = {中山, 本文 and NAKAYAMA , Motofumi}, issue = {1}, journal = {宮崎公立大学人文学部紀要, Bulletin of Miyazaki Municipal University Faculty of Humanities}, month = {Mar}, note = {Lawrence's efforts in his works were centered on how one should establish the relationship of man to woman. As seen in A Propos of "Lady Chatterley's Lover," Lawrence thought that "we have abstracted men and women into separate personalities -personalities being isolated units, incapable of togetherness" and been "bodiless, dead." In almost all his works, he quested how one could get togetherness, casting away the separated self. The thought that humans have lost the vivid relationships drove him to produce interesting stories, including Women in Love. Hermione and Gerald represent those who have been separated from the wholeness of life. Lawrence's idea of the human relationships gets to be directed to a greater self or a greater life beyond individuality towards the end of his life. The purpose here is to trace how Lawrence developed a little self into a greater one in his later works.}, pages = {145--160}, title = {ロレンスにおける"wholeness"への道}, volume = {20}, year = {2013}, yomi = {ナカヤマ, モトフミ} }