This essay focuses on James’s women characters as simultaneously coded in personal (i.e., individual, psychological, dramatic) and impersonal (i.e., historically given, ideologically inflected, and socially shared) terms. By examining some crucial characters from James’s major works—from Daisy Miller and Isabel Archer to Kate Croy and Maggie Verver—as well as from lesser known stories, and by highlighting relevant aspects of their characterization and role in the plot, the essay attempts to show the complex way James constructs his female characters as both individualized, psychologically credible agents of free will, in an updated version of the “character-effect” typical of the realistic tradition, and objects and vehicles of a sophistica...
In the nineteenth century female writers were only able to conceive of and construct two types of na...
The myth of the disobedient woman, along with patriarchal myths of virginity, provide writers with w...
Female character development in literature can be revolutionary, especially for protagonists that be...
This essay focuses on James’s women characters as simultaneously coded in personal (i.e., individual...
The present MA thesis explores the concept of a female body and voice and their transformations as p...
James’s stories of writers have been mostly read in terms of male-male relations, whether in the for...
This paper examines the role of ideology in the construction of absent characters in Henry James’s s...
grantor: University of TorontoHenry James's handling of character raises questions about t...
This dissertation, as its title suggests, is a study of gender and identification. The main body of ...
In this dissertation, I close read four turn-of-the-century American novels by Henry James, Kate ...
More than 100 years after Henry James’s death, criticism is still working through unresolved gender ...
This work focuses on analyzing and questioning the role two feminine protagonists play in a phallogo...
Fictional depictions of feminine reading and writing practices reveal transformations in expectation...
The exegesis portion of my thesis examines representations of feminine masochism in 20th-century lit...
In this thesis, I’ll be analyzing Edith Wharton\u27s The Age of Innocence through a feminist lens, w...
In the nineteenth century female writers were only able to conceive of and construct two types of na...
The myth of the disobedient woman, along with patriarchal myths of virginity, provide writers with w...
Female character development in literature can be revolutionary, especially for protagonists that be...
This essay focuses on James’s women characters as simultaneously coded in personal (i.e., individual...
The present MA thesis explores the concept of a female body and voice and their transformations as p...
James’s stories of writers have been mostly read in terms of male-male relations, whether in the for...
This paper examines the role of ideology in the construction of absent characters in Henry James’s s...
grantor: University of TorontoHenry James's handling of character raises questions about t...
This dissertation, as its title suggests, is a study of gender and identification. The main body of ...
In this dissertation, I close read four turn-of-the-century American novels by Henry James, Kate ...
More than 100 years after Henry James’s death, criticism is still working through unresolved gender ...
This work focuses on analyzing and questioning the role two feminine protagonists play in a phallogo...
Fictional depictions of feminine reading and writing practices reveal transformations in expectation...
The exegesis portion of my thesis examines representations of feminine masochism in 20th-century lit...
In this thesis, I’ll be analyzing Edith Wharton\u27s The Age of Innocence through a feminist lens, w...
In the nineteenth century female writers were only able to conceive of and construct two types of na...
The myth of the disobedient woman, along with patriarchal myths of virginity, provide writers with w...
Female character development in literature can be revolutionary, especially for protagonists that be...