David H. Lawrence's novel, Lady Chatterley's Lover, is based on his oppositional utopian vision. Although most people see this an ironic utopianism, it is more of a social reform, rather than an alternate world. The dialect and actions of the characters represent a utopian society, which is dedicated to pleasure. Lawrence is a very open writer when it comes to sex and vulgarity, which helps him to easily be able to illustrate this sexual utopia. In Lawrence's novel, Lady Chatterley's Lover, he expresses his vision of a utopian environment with the use of his character's dialect, as well as through his willingness to freely use the theme of sexual freedom and sensuality in his novel.
First, Lawrence uses sexual freedom to give us an image of this utopian society. He first illustrates this in the affair with Connie and Michaelis a young playwright. This is the first of many affairs in which she is not fully sexually satisfied. The characters in this novel are spontaneou
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