Henry James’s Dramas of Cultivation: Liberalism and Democracy in The Bostonians and The Princess Casamassima

This article identifies an overlooked discursive context for Henry James's novels of 1886. Liberal political thought pervaded both James’s transatlantic intellectual milieu and the pages of the periodicals in which he published his work; the novels, I argue, engage critically with the democrati...

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Main Author: Coit, E
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Johns Hopkins University Press 2015
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author Coit, E
author_facet Coit, E
author_sort Coit, E
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description This article identifies an overlooked discursive context for Henry James's novels of 1886. Liberal political thought pervaded both James’s transatlantic intellectual milieu and the pages of the periodicals in which he published his work; the novels, I argue, engage critically with the democratic ideal of widespread cultivation prized by late nineteenth-century American liberalism. This engagement becomes visible only when we adopt a revised understanding of that liberalism, giving fresh attention to its overt agenda of cultivation and democracy. The novels enact the difficulties inherent in that agenda: by staging liberal cultivations that end tragically, they dramatize democratic liberalism's internal contradictions.
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spelling oxford-uuid:84d71c73-2491-49a2-8e4e-923b0df2077b2022-03-26T21:53:43ZHenry James’s Dramas of Cultivation: Liberalism and Democracy in The Bostonians and The Princess CasamassimaJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:84d71c73-2491-49a2-8e4e-923b0df2077bEnglishORA DepositJohns Hopkins University Press2015Coit, EThis article identifies an overlooked discursive context for Henry James's novels of 1886. Liberal political thought pervaded both James’s transatlantic intellectual milieu and the pages of the periodicals in which he published his work; the novels, I argue, engage critically with the democratic ideal of widespread cultivation prized by late nineteenth-century American liberalism. This engagement becomes visible only when we adopt a revised understanding of that liberalism, giving fresh attention to its overt agenda of cultivation and democracy. The novels enact the difficulties inherent in that agenda: by staging liberal cultivations that end tragically, they dramatize democratic liberalism's internal contradictions.
spellingShingle Coit, E
Henry James’s Dramas of Cultivation: Liberalism and Democracy in The Bostonians and The Princess Casamassima
title Henry James’s Dramas of Cultivation: Liberalism and Democracy in The Bostonians and The Princess Casamassima
title_full Henry James’s Dramas of Cultivation: Liberalism and Democracy in The Bostonians and The Princess Casamassima
title_fullStr Henry James’s Dramas of Cultivation: Liberalism and Democracy in The Bostonians and The Princess Casamassima
title_full_unstemmed Henry James’s Dramas of Cultivation: Liberalism and Democracy in The Bostonians and The Princess Casamassima
title_short Henry James’s Dramas of Cultivation: Liberalism and Democracy in The Bostonians and The Princess Casamassima
title_sort henry james s dramas of cultivation liberalism and democracy in the bostonians and the princess casamassima
work_keys_str_mv AT coite henryjamessdramasofcultivationliberalismanddemocracyinthebostoniansandtheprincesscasamassima