‘Where the night still hangs like a half-folded bat’: The Poetry of D.H. Lawrence by The British Academy published on 2016-04-05T15:03:52Z Dr Santanu Das Thursday 9 December 2010, 5.30pm The Royal Society, 6-9 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1 DH Lawrence poetry. Chatterton Lecture 2010. Lawrence the novelist has now eclipsed Lawrence the poet, but he started and ended his career by writing poetry. This lecture will locate his poetry in the literary and oral cultures of the time, and will try to understand its originality and continuing power to haunt and disturb us. In particular, it will pay attention to the linguistic texture of this ‘poetry of the present’ to explore intimate connections between sense perception, structures of feeling, and formal innovation. About the speaker Santanu Das is a senior lecturer at the School of English and Drama, Queen Mary University of London and has held postdoctoral research fellowships at St John’s College, Cambridge and at the British Academy. He is the author of Touch and Intimacy in First World War Literature (Cambridge, 2006) and the editor of Race, Empire and the First World War (Cambridge, forthcoming). In 2009, he was awarded a Philip Leverhulme Prize. The lecture was chaired by Professor Jon Stallworthy FBA. Genre Learning