James’s stories of writers have been mostly read in terms of male-male relations, whether in the form of an exclusive dedication to art (coded as a male profession) or of a homoaesthetic and homoerotic desire. Women are thus doubly rejected, both as objects of desire and as representatives of the bourgeois world that the artist needs to repudiate if he is to be true to his aesthetic calling. This essay attempts to probe the function of women as characters and readers in the complex nexus created by aestheticism and homoeroticism. Through an analysis of the textual representation of the two women characters in “The Author of Beltraffio,” it attempts to show that James’s story represents women as in fact deeply involved in the aesthetic spher...
As men have written women so women have always written men. Debate about how men have represented wo...
Historically, children’s literature featuring abandoned boys focuses on separation from the maternal...
This dissertation demonstrates that women authors in the eighteenth century carved out a space for t...
The exegesis portion of my thesis examines representations of feminine masochism in 20th-century lit...
This essay focuses on changing constructions, discourses, and institutions of femininity and masculi...
Henry James, conscious of himself as a artist, agonized over his artistic technique in his non-ficti...
In Henry James's Roderick Hudson (1875), the connection between art and life is made manifest by the...
Fictional depictions of feminine reading and writing practices reveal transformations in expectation...
In Henry James's Roderick Hudson (1875), the connection between art and life is made manifest by the...
This essay focuses on James’s women characters as simultaneously coded in personal (i.e., individual...
More than 100 years after Henry James’s death, criticism is still working through unresolved gender ...
Throughout history women have been the object of oppression by patriarchal society. Men have had mor...
This extended essay is an investigation of the protagonist female characters in both James Joyce’s D...
The Bostonians (1886) is known as Henry James’s lesbian novel in which the writer’s ambivalent look ...
In the following essay, I examine the work, The Second Sex by Simone de Beauvoir alongside the novel...
As men have written women so women have always written men. Debate about how men have represented wo...
Historically, children’s literature featuring abandoned boys focuses on separation from the maternal...
This dissertation demonstrates that women authors in the eighteenth century carved out a space for t...
The exegesis portion of my thesis examines representations of feminine masochism in 20th-century lit...
This essay focuses on changing constructions, discourses, and institutions of femininity and masculi...
Henry James, conscious of himself as a artist, agonized over his artistic technique in his non-ficti...
In Henry James's Roderick Hudson (1875), the connection between art and life is made manifest by the...
Fictional depictions of feminine reading and writing practices reveal transformations in expectation...
In Henry James's Roderick Hudson (1875), the connection between art and life is made manifest by the...
This essay focuses on James’s women characters as simultaneously coded in personal (i.e., individual...
More than 100 years after Henry James’s death, criticism is still working through unresolved gender ...
Throughout history women have been the object of oppression by patriarchal society. Men have had mor...
This extended essay is an investigation of the protagonist female characters in both James Joyce’s D...
The Bostonians (1886) is known as Henry James’s lesbian novel in which the writer’s ambivalent look ...
In the following essay, I examine the work, The Second Sex by Simone de Beauvoir alongside the novel...
As men have written women so women have always written men. Debate about how men have represented wo...
Historically, children’s literature featuring abandoned boys focuses on separation from the maternal...
This dissertation demonstrates that women authors in the eighteenth century carved out a space for t...