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  1. In 1917, at 23, she marries Clifford Chatterley, the scion of an aristocratic line. After a month's honeymoon, he is sent to war, and returns paralyzed from the waist down, impotent. After the war, Clifford becomes a successful writer, and many intellectuals flock to the Chatterley mansion, Wragby.

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  3. A brief overview of the novel by D. H. Lawrence, which explores the themes of sex, class, and love. Connie, a married aristocrat, has an affair with Oliver, a working-class gamekeeper, and faces the consequences of her transgression.

  4. The story concerns a young married woman, the former Constance Reid (Lady Chatterley), whose upper-class baronet husband, Sir Clifford Chatterley, described as a handsome, well-built man, is paralysed from the waist down because of a Great War injury. Constance has an affair with the gamekeeper, Oliver Mellors.

    • David Herbert Lawrence, Andrés Bosch
    • 1928
  5. Lady Chatterley's Lover Summary. Lady Chatterley's Lover opens around two years after World War I, when the country of England was recovering both mentally and physically from the war. It focuses on the marriage between two characters, which has occurred prior to the events of the novel: Lady Chatterley, Constance née Reid, and her husband ...

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    Lady Chatterley’s Lover, novel by D. H. Lawrence, published in a limited English-language edition in Florence (1928) and in Paris (1929). It was first published in England in an expurgated version in 1932. The full text was published only in 1959 in New York City and in 1960 in London, when it was the subject of a landmark obscenity trial (Regina v...

    As a result of the controveries and litigation around its publication, Lady Chatterley’s Lover is widely known for its explicit descriptions of sexual intercourse. These occur in the context of a plot that centers on Lady Constance Chatterley and her unsatisfying marriage to Sir Clifford, a wealthy Midlands landowner, writer, and intellectual. Constance enters into a passionate love affair with her husband’s educated gamekeeper, Oliver Mellors. Pregnant by him, she leaves her husband, and the novel ends with Mellors and Constance temporarily separated in the hope of securing divorces in order to begin a new life together.

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    The publication history of Lady Chatterley’s Lover provides a plot itself worthy of a novel. Lawrence had already faced censorship with his 1915 novel The Rainbow, one reason Lawrence cited for leaving England after the end of World War I made it possible to do so. Published privately in 1928 and long available in foreign editions, the first unexpurgated edition of Lady Chatterley’s Lover did not appear in England until Penguin risked publishing it in 1960, a year after Grove Press published it in 1959 in the United States. Lawrence had died in 1930, and it was his widow, Frieda, who championed the book for decades before finding willing publishers for Lawrence’s complete, uncensored manuscript.

    Grove successfully sued when the U.S. Post Office seized copies of its edition on the grounds that the material was obscene and therefore contraband; reviewing the matter, a federal judge ruled instead that Lawrence’s work was of literary merit and that banning it “would be inimical to a free society.” Grove followed with suits that cleared the way for the unimpeded sale of other books deemed obscene, among them Henry Miller’s Tropic of Cancer. Prosecuted under the Obscene Publications Act of 1959, Penguin was acquitted in the U.K. after a notorious trial, in which many eminent authors of the day appeared as witnesses for the defense.

  6. Plot Summary. The novel is set in England in the 1920s. Constance “Connie” Chatterley and Clifford Chatterley live at Wragby Hall; the house and estate have been owned by the Chatterley family for generations. Clifford was injured fighting in World War I and is paralyzed from the waist down.

  7. The best study guide to Lady Chatterley’s Lover on the planet, from the creators of SparkNotes. Get the summaries, analysis, and quotes you need.

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