Henry James and the morality of fiction
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Henry James and the morality of fiction
(American university studies, Series XXIV,
P. Lang, c1993
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [161]-172) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Henry James and the Morality of Fiction explores what James terms in the criticism, expresses in his letters and Notebooks, and represents in character relations as the morality of fiction. Based on an analysis of figures of speech which recur throughout James' non-fiction writing at moments when moral issues come sharply into focus, Henry James and the Morality of Fiction investigates those figures as elements of characterization in six novels from Roderick Hudson to The Golden Bowl. Each novel is seen as representative of a distinct phase of James' career through the way it expresses his attitudes on the relation of ethical responsibility to the individual and society through character. Overall, the study is both aesthetic and social: its aesthetic component lies in its analysis of James' style; its social component flows from a definition of the ethical perspective expressed by the style.
Table of Contents
- Contents: Introduction
- Art and the Moral Imagination in Roderick Hudson, Later Style in Washington Square
- Morality, Art and Power in The Bostonians
- The Princess Casamassima and the Drama of Incomplete Redemption
- The Awkward Age and the Civic Use of the Imagination
- Fabular Art in The Golden Bowl.
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