Freshly Printed - allow 8 days lead
Couldn't load pickup availability
Henry James and the Father Question
Andrew Taylor explores the intellectual relationship between Henry James and his father.
Andrew Taylor (Author)
9780521120715, Cambridge University Press
Paperback, published 1 October 2009
248 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.4 cm, 0.37 kg
"In response to several earlier studies, especially the work of Quentin anderson and Alfred Habegger's ^Henry james and the 'Woman Business' ... Taylor takes issue with 'blinkered and dehistoricized' treatments of the relationship between Henry James Senior and Henry James Junior." Choice
The intellectual relationship between Henry James and his father, who was a philosopher and theologian, proved to be an influential resource for the novelist. Andrew Taylor explores how James's writing responds to James Senior's epistemological, thematic and narrative concerns, and relocates these concerns in a more secularised and cosmopolitan cultural milieu. Taylor examines the nature of both men's engagement with autobiographical strategies, issues of gender reform, and the language of religion. He argues for a reading of Henry James that is informed by an awareness of paternal inheritance. Taylor's study reveals the complex and at times antagonistic dialogue between the elder James and his peers, particularly Emerson and Whitman, in the vanguard of mid nineteenth-century American Romanticism. Through close readings of a wide range of novels and texts, he demonstrates how this dialogue anticipates James's own theories of fiction and selfhood.
Acknowledgements
Note on brief titles
Introduction: the nature of inheritance
1. Autobiography and the writing of significance
2. Reading the 'man without a handle': Emerson and the construction of a partial portrait
3. 'Under certain circumstances': Jamesian reflections on the fall
4. Doing 'public justice': New England reform and The Bostonians
5. Breaking the mould
Conclusion: 'the imminence of a transformation scene'
Notes
Index.
Subject Areas: History of Western philosophy [HPC], Literary studies: from c 1900 - [DSBH]
