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MODERN NOVELISTS General Editor: Norman Page

MODERN NOVELISTS Published titles ALBERT CAMUS Philip Thody FYODOR DOSTOEVSKY Peter Conradi E. M. FORSTER Norman Page WILLIAM GOLDING James Gindin GRAHAM GREENE Neil McEwan HENRY JAMES Alan BeHringer DORIS LESSING Ruth Whittaker MARCEL PROUST Philip Thody SIX WOMEN NOVELISTS Merryn Williams JOHN UPDIKE Judie Newman EVELYN WAUGH Jacqueline McDonnell H. G. WELLS Michael Draper Forthcoming titles JOSEPH CONRAD Owen Knowles WILLIAM FAULKNER David Dowling F. SCOTT FITZGERALD JohnS. Whitley GUSTAVE FLAUBERT David Roe JAMES JOYCE Richard Brown D. H. LAWRENCE G. M. Hyde MALCOLM LOWRY Tony Bareham GEORGE ORWELL Valerie Meyers BARBARA PYM Michael Cotsell PAUL SCOTT G. K. Das MURIEL SPARK Norman Page GERTRUDE STEIN Shirley Neuman VIRGINIA WOOLF Edward Bishop

MODERN NOVELISTS HENRY JAMES Alan W. BeHringer St. Martin's Press New York

Alan W. BeHringer, 1988 Softcover reprint of the hardcover 1st edition 1988 978-0-333-40756-1 All rights reserved. For information, write: Scholarly and Reference Division, St. Martin's Press, Inc., 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010 First published in the United States of America in 1988 ISBN 978-0-333-40757-8 ISBN 978-1-349-19539-8 (ebook) DOI 10.1007/978-1-349-19539-8 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data BeHringer, Alan W. Henry James (Modern novelists) Bibliography: p. Includes index. l. James, Henry, 1843-1916----Criticism and interpretation. I. Title. II. Series. PS2124.B44 1988 813'.4 88-4486 ISBN 978-0-312-02056-9

Contents Acknowledgements General Editor's Preface Vl Vll 1 The Life of Henry James 2 The Victorian James- 'Mme. de Mauves', The American, The Europeans 26 3 American Girls - 'Daisy Miller', 'The Pension Beaurepas', Washington Square, The Portrait of a Lady 44 4 Art and Conflict- 'The Aspern Papers', The Tragic Muse, 'The Death ofthe Lion' 69 5 English Morality- The Spoils of Poynton, What Maisie Knew, 'The Turn of the Screw' 86 6 James the Modern Novelist- 'The Beast in the Jungle', The Golden Bowl 105 7 Henry James's Critical Fortunes 123 Notes 135 Bibliography 145 Index 150 v

Acknowledgements I am indebted to many friends and colleagues for help in understanding Henry James's writings. Among them I would single out Alun R. Jones for his stimulating exposition of James's idea of dramatised consciousness in seminars on literary criticism. I am thankful to my wife and family for forebearance and support during the period of composition of this book, and to Mrs Joyce Williams for secretarial assistance. I gratefully acknowledge contributions from the University College of North Wales towards research costs. Vl

General Editor's Preface The death of the novel has often been announced, and part of the secret of its obstinate vitality must be its capacity for growth, adaptation, self-renewal and even self-transformation: like some vigorous organism in a speeded-up Darwinian ecosystem, it adapts itself quickly to a changing world. War and revolution, economic crisis and social change, radically new ideologies such as Marxism and Freudianism, have made this century unprecedented in human history in the speed and extent of change, but the novel has shown an extraordinary capacity to find new forms and techniques and to accommodate new ideas and conceptions of human nature and human experience, and even to take up new positions on the nature of fiction itself. In the generations immediately preceding and following 1914, the novel underwent a radical redefinition of its nature and possibilities. The present series of monographs is devoted to the novelists who created the modern novel and to those who, in their turn, either continued and extended, or reacted against and rejected, the traditions established during that period of intense exploration and experiment. It includes a number of those who lived and wrote in the nineteenth century but whose innovative contribution to the art of fiction makes it impossible to ignore them in any account of the origins of the modern novel; it also includes the so-called 'modernists' and those who in the mid- and late-twentieth century have emerged as outstanding practitioners of this genre. The scope is, inevitably, international; not only, in the migratory and exile-haunted world of our century, do writers refuse to heed national frontiers - 'English' literature lays claims to Conrad the Pole, Henry James the American, and Joyce the Irishman - but Vll

Vlll General Editor's Preface geniuses such as Flaubert, Dostoevski and Kafka have had an influence on the fiction of many nations. Each volume in the series is intended to provide an introduction to the fiction of the writer concerned, both for those approaching him or her for the first time and for those who are already familiar with some parts of the achievement in question and now wish to place it in the context of the total oeuvre. Although essential information relating to the writer's life and times is given, usually in an opening chapter, the approach is primarily critical and the emphasis is not upon 'background' or generalisations but upon close examination of important texts. Where an author is notably prolific, major texts have been selected for detailed attention but an attempt has also been made to convey, more summarily, a sense of the nature and quality of the author's work as a whole. Those who want to read further will find suggestions in the select bibliography included in each volume. Many novelists are, of course, not only novelists but also poets, essayists, biographers, dramatists, travel writers and so forth; many have practised shorter forms of fiction; and many have written letters or kept diaries that constitute a significant part of their literary output. A brief study cannot hope to deal with all these in detail, but where the shorter fiction and the non-fictional writings, public and private, have an important relationship to the novels, some space has been devoted to them.

For Mark