This essay examines an example of literary (re)appropriation by comparing the characterization of the collector in Balzac’s Le Cousin Pons and in James’s short story “Adina” (1873). Balzac's novel provided James with important insights on the psychology of collectors, which James would later employ to give life to complex characters such as Christopher Newman or Adam Verver. The study of the intertextual relation of the works allows us to reflect on James’s frequent association between the solitary obsessions of the collector and the aggressive isolationism which often characterize his American characters abroad
Thesis (Ph.D)--Boston UniversityHenry James regarded as "definitive" the selected edition of his Nov...
As an alternative to psychoanalysis’s aggressive subject/object relation, Leo Bersani proposes a mor...
Henry James is often regarded as an author of ‘coterie-literature’: someone who wrote only for and a...
This essay examines an example of literary (re)appropriation by comparing the characterization of th...
Recent studies of the reception and collection of pre-Revolutionary art in nineteenth-century France...
This book examines the role and the meaning of collecting in the fiction of Henry James. Emerging as...
In this paper, I analyze some novels in which artists are observed by other characters. I focus on t...
Collecting, as it was practiced in the 1880s, meant cultivating a comforting and busy, but also diso...
Honore ́ de Balzac was a passionate collector who grew up in painful circumstances with a cold and r...
The figure of the female collector in Henry James’s 1896 novel The Spoils of Poynton forms the basis...
International audienceHenry James, as an American author who chose to live in Europe, seems to embod...
Critics suggest that a search for self carried out by a divided individual is implicit in all of Hen...
This essay presents Balzac and Joyce respectively as chroniclers of the fate of artistic autonomy in...
As an American author who chose to live in Europe, Henry James frequently wrote about cultural diffe...
This essay presents Balzac and Joyce respectively as chroniclers of the fate of artistic autonomy in...
Thesis (Ph.D)--Boston UniversityHenry James regarded as "definitive" the selected edition of his Nov...
As an alternative to psychoanalysis’s aggressive subject/object relation, Leo Bersani proposes a mor...
Henry James is often regarded as an author of ‘coterie-literature’: someone who wrote only for and a...
This essay examines an example of literary (re)appropriation by comparing the characterization of th...
Recent studies of the reception and collection of pre-Revolutionary art in nineteenth-century France...
This book examines the role and the meaning of collecting in the fiction of Henry James. Emerging as...
In this paper, I analyze some novels in which artists are observed by other characters. I focus on t...
Collecting, as it was practiced in the 1880s, meant cultivating a comforting and busy, but also diso...
Honore ́ de Balzac was a passionate collector who grew up in painful circumstances with a cold and r...
The figure of the female collector in Henry James’s 1896 novel The Spoils of Poynton forms the basis...
International audienceHenry James, as an American author who chose to live in Europe, seems to embod...
Critics suggest that a search for self carried out by a divided individual is implicit in all of Hen...
This essay presents Balzac and Joyce respectively as chroniclers of the fate of artistic autonomy in...
As an American author who chose to live in Europe, Henry James frequently wrote about cultural diffe...
This essay presents Balzac and Joyce respectively as chroniclers of the fate of artistic autonomy in...
Thesis (Ph.D)--Boston UniversityHenry James regarded as "definitive" the selected edition of his Nov...
As an alternative to psychoanalysis’s aggressive subject/object relation, Leo Bersani proposes a mor...
Henry James is often regarded as an author of ‘coterie-literature’: someone who wrote only for and a...