“A garden in the middle of the sea”: Henry James’s <em>The Aspern Papers</em> and Transnational American Studies
Nicole Waller’s study of Henry James’s <em>The Aspern Papers</em> examines how conventional literary studies’ approaches (those that depend on biography and character analysis) may tether James’s work to a set of values that reinscribe the hierarchies that his narrative s...
Main Author: | Nicole Waller |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
eScholarship Publishing, University of California
2011-12-01
|
Series: | Journal of Transnational American Studies |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://submit.escholarship.org/ojs/index.php/acgcc_jtas/article/view/11639 |
Similar Items
-
Echoes of the Heart: Henry James’s Evocation of Edgar Allan Poe in “The Aspern Papers”
by: Leonardo Buonomo
Published: (2021-03-01) -
An “Entirely Personal” Success: Intertextuality and Self-Reflexive Ironies in Henry James’s “Pandora”
by: Sabrina Vellucci
Published: (2021-03-01) -
Living for the Dead in Henry James’s "Maud-Evelyn"
by: Thomas Constantinesco
Published: (2016-09-01) -
The Reader in It: Henry James’s “Desperate Plagiarism”
by: Hivren Demir-Atay -
Silence and Voices in James’s Venice
by: Rosella Mamoli Zorzi
Published: (2020-07-01)