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Details

Autor(en) / Beteiligte
Titel
The Ambassadors, The American Scene, and the Transnational Turn in American Studies
Ist Teil von
  • Henry James’ Travel, 2019, p.10-28
Auflage
1
Ort / Verlag
Routledge
Erscheinungsjahr
2019
Link zum Volltext
Quelle
Alma/SFX Local Collection
Beschreibungen/Notizen
  • This chapter considers Henry James’s classic 1903 novel and subsequent appraisal of American culture (1907) within the context of growing criticism and scholarship on the transnational turn in American Studies. The transnational move frequently is accompanied by a readjustment of allegiances and values, as characters encounter different cultures and perspectives. The narratives inscribed in both of these works are lodged within historical dynamics involving the place of the United States within the world. An examination of the novel’s protagonist, Lambert Strether, as he moves from England to Paris, shows how his loyalties shift, transcending the interests of the party who sent him on his mission, as he takes things in and sees another (transnational) perspective, adjusting his own moral compass and views in response his apprehension of fresh and changing circumstances. Similarly, in The American Scene, our “restless analyst” takes in and critiques his homeland in relation to values he has known and experienced abroad, applying a distinctly comparativist approach in an appraisal of aesthetic values, the role of money, and the unfolding experiment in democracy. Both narratives end on a distinctly inconclusive note. A consideration of The Ambassadors and The American Scene side by side highlights key relationships between James’s fiction and his travel writing. James’s short story “The Jolly Corner,” along with the two preceding more substantial works, dramatically presents the dialectical interaction between aesthetic appreciation precipitated by travel and exposure to other cultures and monetary accumulation accompanying an adherence to domestic interest. More broadly, the essay opens up to consider James’s novel within the tradition of the American expatriate novel, a tradition extending from Cooper up through Hawthorne, James, Hemingway, Barnes, Baldwin, Bowles, Kingsolver, Doerr, Eggers, and so many others. This transnational approach reveals a complex, evolving story of US interactions with the world. The Transnational Turn in American Studies is grounded in a critique of the US position in the world, notably a critique of exceptionalist assumptions and ideologies that have often informed and shaped US international policies and attitudes. The international theme in Henry James’s work has long been recognized and discussed by critics, and recent work has sought to place James within contemporary conversations on transnationalism and globalization. James certainly recognizes a peculiar American character and philosophy, distinct from other countries. Just as James’s protagonists have travelled, so, too, have his texts. Indeed the range of these textual travels has been much wider than the travels of James and his characters, extending beyond Europe to Russia, Asia, Latin American, the Arab world, to all corners of the globe. A deeper exploration of the tradition of the American expatriate novel, of which James is a key figure, is just one productive line of inquiry prompted by the transnational turn.
Sprache
Englisch
Identifikatoren
ISBN: 9781138350526, 1138350524
DOI: 10.4324/9780429435805-2
Titel-ID: cdi_informaworld_taylorfrancisbooks_10_4324_9780429435805_2_version2
Format

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