Below is an outline and key thematic analysis you can use to draft your paper.
Mellors represents the "primal" man. Lawrence uses explicit language (the "four-letter words") not for shock value, but to reclaim a "phallic language" that he felt society had made "dirty" through shame. Section 3: Class and Social Barriers Lady Chatterley's Lover
Clifford lives entirely in the world of ideas and success, which Constance eventually finds hollow and "void". Below is an outline and key thematic analysis
No paper on this novel is complete without mentioning its legal history. the "lady chatterley's lover" case - API Parliament UK Section 3: Class and Social Barriers Clifford lives
Through the affair between the aristocratic Constance Chatterley and the working-class gamekeeper Oliver Mellors, Lawrence argues that modern industrial society has "emasculated" the human spirit, suggesting that true vitality can only be reclaimed through a reunification of physical passion and emotional tenderness. Section 1: The Impact of World War I
The relationship between Constance and Mellors is a direct challenge to the "impassable gulf" of the British class system.
The novel is set in the aftermath of the Great War, which Lawrence portrays as a "tragic age".