Author:
Bedse Sunita Gauram, Dr. Manohar D. Dugaje
Abstract:
In Women in Love, D. H. Lawrence entwined the lives of two sisters, Ursula and Gudrun Brangwen, and their relationships with two men, Rupert Birkin and Gerald Crich, where Lawrence explores the intricacies of love and human relationships in Women in Love. The story revolves around themes of desire, existential reflection, and the fight for individual individuality in romantic relationships and is set in early 20th-century England. Through a queer feminist lens, this essay examines the psychological agony and latent lesbian desire in D.H. Lawrence's Women in Love (1920). It contends that an undercurrent of same-sex desire suppressed by hetero-normative patriarchy is shown in Lawrence's depiction of female relationships, especially that of Gudrun Brangwen. Gudrun's strong emotional connection to her sister Ursula and her attraction to the feminine sculptor Loerke imply an implicit rejection of conventional male-dominated relationships, even as her hostile relationship with Gerald Crich devolves into violence and emotional collapse. Based on Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick's theories on homosocial desire and Adrienne Rich's concept of ‘compulsory heterosexuality,’ this study reinterprets Gudrun's psychological struggle and emotional separation as manifestations of suppressed lesbian potential rather than pathology. In the end, the book becomes a place of conflict between queer female subjectivity and male-centered narrative control.
Keywords:
Lesbian, Queer Theory, Heterosexuality, Female Intimacy, Gender and Sexuality, Repression
Article Info:
Received: 23 Jul 2025; Received in revised form: 19 Aug 2025; Accepted: 23 Aug 2025; Available online: 26 Aug 2025
DOI:
10.22161/ijels.104.81