Homosociality and the Aesthetic in Henry James's Roderick Hudson

In Henry James's Roderick Hudson (1875), the connection between art and life is made manifest by the relationship between the sculptor Roderick Hudson and his repressed, psychically split patron, Rowland Mallet. In this essay I explore the heretofore unnoticed connections between the dynamics o...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mendelssohn, M
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: University of California Press 2003
Subjects:
_version_ 1826287251598868480
author Mendelssohn, M
author_facet Mendelssohn, M
author_sort Mendelssohn, M
collection OXFORD
description In Henry James's Roderick Hudson (1875), the connection between art and life is made manifest by the relationship between the sculptor Roderick Hudson and his repressed, psychically split patron, Rowland Mallet. In this essay I explore the heretofore unnoticed connections between the dynamics of same-sex desire and the aesthetic concerns of James's novel. I argue that the novel's aesthetic is mirrored in its representation of homosocial bonds and Catholicism. For Rowland Mallet aestheticized Catholicism and the homoeroticized patron-artist relationship are means of palliating his psychological and sexual fragmentation. Patronage allows the idle Rowland to become a creator at a remove and to consummate his aesthetic desires. Moreover, patronage confers a socially and contractually sanctioned "right to sight," whereby Rowland can satisfy his scopophilic tendencies by watching his ward and his works. The patron-artist relationship in the novel can therefore be read as a same-sex enactment of the myth of Pygmalion and Galatea, a motif that James had rehearsed in stories preceding Roderick Hudson.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T01:55:51Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:9baec09e-0f41-4f3e-8f0a-f014fd4ae59b
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T01:55:51Z
publishDate 2003
publisher University of California Press
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:9baec09e-0f41-4f3e-8f0a-f014fd4ae59b2022-03-27T00:30:33ZHomosociality and the Aesthetic in Henry James's Roderick HudsonJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:9baec09e-0f41-4f3e-8f0a-f014fd4ae59bAmerican literature in EnglishEnglish Language and LiteratureEnglishOxford University Research Archive - ValetUniversity of California Press2003Mendelssohn, MIn Henry James's Roderick Hudson (1875), the connection between art and life is made manifest by the relationship between the sculptor Roderick Hudson and his repressed, psychically split patron, Rowland Mallet. In this essay I explore the heretofore unnoticed connections between the dynamics of same-sex desire and the aesthetic concerns of James's novel. I argue that the novel's aesthetic is mirrored in its representation of homosocial bonds and Catholicism. For Rowland Mallet aestheticized Catholicism and the homoeroticized patron-artist relationship are means of palliating his psychological and sexual fragmentation. Patronage allows the idle Rowland to become a creator at a remove and to consummate his aesthetic desires. Moreover, patronage confers a socially and contractually sanctioned "right to sight," whereby Rowland can satisfy his scopophilic tendencies by watching his ward and his works. The patron-artist relationship in the novel can therefore be read as a same-sex enactment of the myth of Pygmalion and Galatea, a motif that James had rehearsed in stories preceding Roderick Hudson.
spellingShingle American literature in English
English Language and Literature
Mendelssohn, M
Homosociality and the Aesthetic in Henry James's Roderick Hudson
title Homosociality and the Aesthetic in Henry James's Roderick Hudson
title_full Homosociality and the Aesthetic in Henry James's Roderick Hudson
title_fullStr Homosociality and the Aesthetic in Henry James's Roderick Hudson
title_full_unstemmed Homosociality and the Aesthetic in Henry James's Roderick Hudson
title_short Homosociality and the Aesthetic in Henry James's Roderick Hudson
title_sort homosociality and the aesthetic in henry james s roderick hudson
topic American literature in English
English Language and Literature
work_keys_str_mv AT mendelssohnm homosocialityandtheaestheticinhenryjamessroderickhudson