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Henry James

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  • 128 Seiten
  • 5 Lesestunden

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One of the master stylists of the English novel, Henry James is often thought of as having lived a life of total absorption in his craft, a life without significant outward events. But James, who combined rare qualities of aloofness and participation, of detachment and alert curiosity, was a man upon whom few experiences and observations were lost. After a restless transatlantic childhood and a brief residence in France, James settled in England, where he became one of the most traveled and sociable writers of his time. In the theme of conflict between the European and American sensibilities he found a world of heightened perceptions to which he gave lasting expression in his works. Relating many of James's best-known stories to the events and real-life characters who inspired his fiction, Harry Moore enhances our appreciation of the works themselves and of their intent creator. He makes it clear that, for James, expatriation from America was not a withdrawal from the world to which he belonged but rather the affirmation of a world he claimed--and made his own--through imagination.

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Henry James, Harry Thornton Moore

Sprache
Erscheinungsdatum
1999
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(Paperback)
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Titel
Henry James
Sprache
Englisch
Erscheinungsdatum
1999
Einband
Paperback
Seitenzahl
128
ISBN10
050026032X
ISBN13
9780500260326
Reihe
Bewertung
3,3 von 5 Sternen
Beschreibung
One of the master stylists of the English novel, Henry James is often thought of as having lived a life of total absorption in his craft, a life without significant outward events. But James, who combined rare qualities of aloofness and participation, of detachment and alert curiosity, was a man upon whom few experiences and observations were lost. After a restless transatlantic childhood and a brief residence in France, James settled in England, where he became one of the most traveled and sociable writers of his time. In the theme of conflict between the European and American sensibilities he found a world of heightened perceptions to which he gave lasting expression in his works. Relating many of James's best-known stories to the events and real-life characters who inspired his fiction, Harry Moore enhances our appreciation of the works themselves and of their intent creator. He makes it clear that, for James, expatriation from America was not a withdrawal from the world to which he belonged but rather the affirmation of a world he claimed--and made his own--through imagination.