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The Plumed Serpent

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The Plumed Serpent (1926) follows Kate Leslie, an Irish widow in post-revolutionary Mexico, as she is drawn into a nationalist-religious movement led by Don Ramón Carrasco and General Cipriano, who seek to revive the cult of Quetzalcoatl. Lawrence's prose is sensuous, ritualistic, and polemical, mixing travel narrative, political romance, mythic symbolism, and modernist psychological inquiry. The novel stands within interwar primitivism and anti-industrial critique, yet its fascination with power, race, and spiritual authority remains deliberately unsettling. David Herbert Lawrence, already notorious for Sons and Lovers, The Rainbow, and Women in Love, wrote from a life of exile, illness, censorship, and restless travel. His time in Mexico sharpened his conviction that Western individualism had become sterile, and that lost forms of communal and sacred energy might answer modern fragmentation. The result reflects both his visionary ambition and his most troubling ideological experiments. This is a demanding but richly rewarding novel for readers interested in Lawrence's late work, modernism's global imagination, or literature's uneasy traffic between myth and politics. Read critically, The Plumed Serpent offers not escapism but a provocative encounter with desire, belief, domination, and cultural reinvention.

Editions (14)

ISBN9788028377434
PublisherSharp Ink
Publication Date05/15/24
Pages280

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