Dekdouk, HadjerHafsa, Naima2018-04-152018-04-152015http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2823This study examines David Herbert Lawrence's Sons and Lovers in order to show how his personal experiences influenced his writings. What motivated this writing is a personal interest in D.H. Lawrence and a fascination with his work and its implicit messages. For understanding the messages of his literary work, it is important to analyze the hidden realities behind events and personalities, and the way of fictionalizing them. In Sons and Lovers, Lawrence writes his joys and, above all, his pains. The consequences of Lawrence's sinuous biography are reflected and described in this novel by means of plots, a set of characters, symbols and themes. The study is informed by psychoanalytical theory through which writing is, ultimately, as simulated as a therapy for self-expression and communication.enDiscours : analyseNovel : Lawrence's sons and lovers : David HerbertFictionalizing the autobiograhy in D.H ( David Herbert )lawrence's sons and loversOther