Into the Wood: Dante, Byron and James in “Ravenna”

Approaching James’s 1874/1875 neglected Italian travelogue “Ravenna” as a disguised parable of the difficulties caused by expatriation for an aspiring writer, this article explores how references to Byron and Dante, and their poetic use of the nearby famous wood, the Pineta, position them as exempla...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tamara L. Follini
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Université Clermont Auvergne
Series:Viatica
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/viatica/1152
Description
Summary:Approaching James’s 1874/1875 neglected Italian travelogue “Ravenna” as a disguised parable of the difficulties caused by expatriation for an aspiring writer, this article explores how references to Byron and Dante, and their poetic use of the nearby famous wood, the Pineta, position them as exemplars who renew James’s confidence in his creative ambitions; it also proposes that an allusion to Ravenna in The Wings of the Dove infuses the novel with overtones of Dante while revealing the elaborate circuits of James’s imaginative invention.
ISSN:2275-0827