文摘
This dissertation examines the modern,worldly dimensions of Henry Jamess literary practice evident across his criticism,nonfiction,and novelistic fiction,which James described to be his "various," comparative response to U.S. culture and society. Drawing upon contemporary critical turns to ethical and affective-oriented aesthetic modes of interpretation,I show that Jamess "various" literary practice expresses worldly and comparative thinking that opposes the private,Protestant-informed "business enterprise" society developing in the United States around the turn of the twentieth-century. In describing James to be an oppositional critic to American business enterprise,my dissertation contributes to ongoing interventions in Henry James studies that have reconstructed James to be a more historically-minded and politically-engaged thinker than asserted in canonical,twentieth-century formalist and New Critical approaches to Jamess literary work. My dissertation proceeds through readings of his late criticism in the Prefaces to the New York Edition,his three-volume autobiography,his mid-career essay "The Art of Fiction" 1884),and finally,to his first novelistic masterpiece at the outset of his career,The Portrait of a Lady 1881/1908). My dissertations formal construction forefronts Jamess contributions as a literary critic,and I describe an oppositional,critical reading practice in his thought based upon ethical,aesthetic,and political modes of reading. Jamess practice as a critic,I argue,not only enables critics today to confront and challenge the ongoing contentious politics of interpretation in Henry James studies,but it allows readers to discern the critical and oppositional dimensions of his novelistic literary fiction,which I show to be particularly evident in The Portrait of a Lady..