Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2085152493> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 80 of
80
with 100 items per page.
- W2085152493 endingPage "243" @default.
- W2085152493 startingPage "237" @default.
- W2085152493 abstract "“Saying the Unsayable”: James’s Realism in the Late 1890s David McWhirter If contemporary reviews of his late 1890s fictions are any indication, James’s fin-de-siècle readers knew he was up to something different; what’s more, they didn’t much like it. James’s novels from this period (roughly The Spoils of Poynton [1897] through The Sacred Fount [1901]) struck many of his contemporaries as strange, shocking, and “thoroughly disagreeable”—even, in one instance, as “hopelessly evil” (Gard 294; Kimbrough 175). Review after review accuses James of having abandoned “normal and wholesome themes” for a “delineation of the detestable” worthy of “the most unnatural French creations,” of “squander[ing] his immense talent on the study of malarial psychology,” of practicing a “literary art . . . of spiritual defilement” (Gard 282, 285, 306; Kimbrough 175). One reviewer of What Maisie Knew (1897) is grateful that James at least refrains from having Beale and Ida marry each other again, a move “that would have exposed him to the charge of attempting to enter into rivalry with the hideous finale of Jude the Obscure” (Hayes 285). Another opines that “what little one is able to understand” of the novel “is alike repellent to taste and feeling, to law and gospel”—a judgment echoed in F. M. Colby’s extraordinary and suggestively entitled essay, “The Queerness of Henry James”: “This is plain enough. Any other man would be suppressed. In a literature so well policed as ours, the position of Henry James is anomalous. He is the only writer of his day whose moral notions do not seem to matter. His dissolute and complicated Muse may say just what she chooses” (Hayes 294; Gard 337). In light of late-twentieth-century James criticism’s concerns—those highlighted by recent gender, queer, and new historical and cultural studies approaches—it is difficult to say which is most striking about these reviews: the almost explicit threats of censorship, the pervasive allegations that James has succumbed to “intellectual coquetry” and “foppery” (“one feels in the reading,” [End Page 237] remarks one commentator on Maisie, “that every manly feeling . . . has become atrophied in Mr. James’s nature”), or the simple fact that this most genteel of Masters once provoked such outrage in his contemporaries (Gard 331, 265, 272). 1 What I want to focus on here, however, is the persistence with which these reviewers recognize a connection between the scandalous modernity represented in the late 90s fictions and their formal and stylistic innovation. Indeed, when they use terms like “queer” and “unnatural” to describe these texts, the reviewers are responding not only to what they see as the “moral squalor” of James’s characters and plots, but also to the ways in which these texts undermine the normative perspectives and conventions of James’s own earlier realist practice (Hayes 291). Thus James is said “to have lost whatever gift of narrative he may once have possessed” through “overcultivation” of his style, or again, is accused of deliberately refusing to provide “a normally unfolded episode or series of episodes in actual life” (Hayes 333, 245). If James’s characters are perverse, in other words, it is partly an effect of the “periphrastic perversity” of his writing (Gard 308). If his fictional men are foppish and feminized, so are the novels themselves: one reviewer, lamenting James’s drift away from his own “creed of realism,” even asserts that “for the sheer honor of the masculine half of humanity it must be contended that James is no realist” (Hayes 268). Colby’s attack is especially suggestive insofar as it reads James’s increasingly “complicated” formal strategies—his abandonment of the “creed of realism”—as nothing less than a deliberate tactic for concealing the “dissolute” nature of what he is representing: “It has been a long time,” Colby warns, “since the public knew what Henry James was up to behind that verbal hedge of his” (Gard 335). 2 Without wishing to recuperate the anxious, sometimes jingoistic, and ubiquitously homophobic Anglo-Saxon masculinity displayed in these reviews, I think the connection they perceive between the scandalous subjects represented in the late 90s texts and the scandal of James’s “dissolute Muse..." @default.
- W2085152493 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W2085152493 creator A5022724326 @default.
- W2085152493 date "1999-01-01" @default.
- W2085152493 modified "2023-10-17" @default.
- W2085152493 title ""Saying the Unsayable": James's Realism in the Late 1890s" @default.
- W2085152493 cites W1498491755 @default.
- W2085152493 cites W1509387806 @default.
- W2085152493 cites W1531269284 @default.
- W2085152493 cites W1540071728 @default.
- W2085152493 cites W1543674175 @default.
- W2085152493 cites W1570704017 @default.
- W2085152493 cites W1980387378 @default.
- W2085152493 cites W1982531585 @default.
- W2085152493 cites W2015606046 @default.
- W2085152493 cites W2019093947 @default.
- W2085152493 cites W2042950914 @default.
- W2085152493 cites W2062358789 @default.
- W2085152493 cites W2092700418 @default.
- W2085152493 cites W2100086683 @default.
- W2085152493 cites W2103136022 @default.
- W2085152493 cites W2317018082 @default.
- W2085152493 cites W2333499018 @default.
- W2085152493 cites W380462485 @default.
- W2085152493 cites W612012967 @default.
- W2085152493 doi "https://doi.org/10.1353/hjr.1999.0028" @default.
- W2085152493 hasPublicationYear "1999" @default.
- W2085152493 type Work @default.
- W2085152493 sameAs 2085152493 @default.
- W2085152493 citedByCount "4" @default.
- W2085152493 countsByYear W20851524932012 @default.
- W2085152493 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2085152493 hasAuthorship W2085152493A5022724326 @default.
- W2085152493 hasConcept C124952713 @default.
- W2085152493 hasConcept C138885662 @default.
- W2085152493 hasConcept C139719470 @default.
- W2085152493 hasConcept C142362112 @default.
- W2085152493 hasConcept C162324750 @default.
- W2085152493 hasConcept C185592680 @default.
- W2085152493 hasConcept C2779602485 @default.
- W2085152493 hasConcept C2781384534 @default.
- W2085152493 hasConcept C31903555 @default.
- W2085152493 hasConcept C52119013 @default.
- W2085152493 hasConcept C543847140 @default.
- W2085152493 hasConcept C8868529 @default.
- W2085152493 hasConcept C95457728 @default.
- W2085152493 hasConceptScore W2085152493C124952713 @default.
- W2085152493 hasConceptScore W2085152493C138885662 @default.
- W2085152493 hasConceptScore W2085152493C139719470 @default.
- W2085152493 hasConceptScore W2085152493C142362112 @default.
- W2085152493 hasConceptScore W2085152493C162324750 @default.
- W2085152493 hasConceptScore W2085152493C185592680 @default.
- W2085152493 hasConceptScore W2085152493C2779602485 @default.
- W2085152493 hasConceptScore W2085152493C2781384534 @default.
- W2085152493 hasConceptScore W2085152493C31903555 @default.
- W2085152493 hasConceptScore W2085152493C52119013 @default.
- W2085152493 hasConceptScore W2085152493C543847140 @default.
- W2085152493 hasConceptScore W2085152493C8868529 @default.
- W2085152493 hasConceptScore W2085152493C95457728 @default.
- W2085152493 hasIssue "3" @default.
- W2085152493 hasLocation W20851524931 @default.
- W2085152493 hasOpenAccess W2085152493 @default.
- W2085152493 hasPrimaryLocation W20851524931 @default.
- W2085152493 hasRelatedWork W1981563805 @default.
- W2085152493 hasRelatedWork W2104348200 @default.
- W2085152493 hasRelatedWork W2108415459 @default.
- W2085152493 hasRelatedWork W2125565096 @default.
- W2085152493 hasRelatedWork W2161654267 @default.
- W2085152493 hasRelatedWork W2336637471 @default.
- W2085152493 hasRelatedWork W2509017116 @default.
- W2085152493 hasRelatedWork W2748952813 @default.
- W2085152493 hasRelatedWork W2899084033 @default.
- W2085152493 hasRelatedWork W2916863096 @default.
- W2085152493 hasVolume "20" @default.
- W2085152493 isParatext "false" @default.
- W2085152493 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W2085152493 magId "2085152493" @default.
- W2085152493 workType "article" @default.