The Importance of Doris Lessing

The 20th century was the scene of women’s demands, and Lessing was one of the visionaries who started the movement when there was still little debate.

Alejandro Orradre
The Collector

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When one approaches the essential themes in Doris Lessing’s bibliography, one finds a series of critical issues in the British writer’s thinking.

Experts have described Lessing as a visionary author, for in her novels, she dares to explore issues that, many years later, would be highly topical and would have a significant impact on society.

Is the case, for example, of the importance for the writer of the relationship between human beings and their environment and their responsibility towards it. This concern for what surrounds us and its protection is what is most in the news today: climate change.

That ability to see beyond her own time and glimpse horizons that many of us fail to glimpse were one of the great virtues that made Lessing one of the seventeen women who have won the Nobel Prize for Literature.

In Lessing’s literary cosmogony coexist several fundamental themes that showed her concerns as a writer and the starting points on which she developed her novels.

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