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Index
Cover page Halftitle page Title page Copyright page Acknowledgements Contents Introduction: Sick Books
A Loathsome Sore Unbandaged: Illness and Modernist Innovation Illness and Disability Situating Modernist Illness
1. Sensory Intensity and Illness in Lawrence
Illness in Lawrence’s Correspondence Non-Fiction of the 1920s: Illness in Theory Relations and Revelations: ‘Sun’, Sons and Lovers, and The Rainbow Postwar Invalids in ‘The Blind Man’ and Lady Chatterley’s Lover
2. Virginia Woolf: Illnesses of the Exotic and the Urban
Tropical Adventure and Intertextual Illness On Being Feverish Ambivalent Sickness Urban Outbreak in Mrs. Dalloway
3. T. S. Eliot and the Skin around the Skull
Embodied Composition ‘the slow stain sinks deeper through the skin’ On Carbuncles Shared Suffering
4. ‘You ought to be supported by the state!’ Dorothy Richardson and the Politics of Care
Whose Illness? I Feel for You: Hancock and Care The Collective and the Individual
5. Winifred Holtby and the Fevered (Middle)Brow
Popularity, Cinema, and the Sick Body Journalism and Light Touch Sickness Getting Out of the House
Epilogue Bibliography Index
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