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A Companion to Henry James Studies
 
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A Companion to Henry James Studies [Hardcover]

Daniel Mark Fogel (Author)

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Book Description

January 30, 1993 0313257922 978-0313257926 annotated edition
Twenty leading Jamesians, in chapters written especially for this reference volume, canvas all areas of Henry James studies, including James's own criticism and critical theory, his novels, tales, plays, travel writings, notebooks, letters, and autobiographies, and his critical reception. Also featured are two appendixes comprising annotated chronologies, one of James's principal publications in book form, the other of landmarks of James criticism and scholarship. The first section, on criticism and theory, opens with a concise overview of criticism on Henry James. The central section of the volume is devoted to James's fiction, from the early years, middle years, the experimental period, and the later fiction, including the short stories. Additional writings focus on special topics, including comparison of James with his European peers, a study of James from a feminist view, an assessment of James's use of the visual arts, and an analysis of James's many revisions of his own works. A section on James's nonfiction includes his epistolary art, his travel book English Hours, his drama, and the social commentary in James's account of his return to America from an expatriate life abroad in The American Scene. The scholars draw upon nearly seven hundred books and articles, which are compiled in a list of works cited. Itself a companion to Robert Gale's A Henry James Encyclopedia (Greenwood Press, 1989), A Companion to Henry James Studies is a carefully structured survey of scholarship, designed as a library reference volume that will be of interest and value to students and scholars of Henry James and specialists in American literature generally.

Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

Covering all aspects of James studies, the 20 original essays in this companion are divided into such sections as "Criticism and Theory," "Fiction," and "Nonfiction." The essays provide excellent critical and bibliographic overviews of the current state of James studies in such areas as James's theory of fiction, his tales, and his "inveterate habit of revising his fiction." The essays are by established scholars, most of whom have published extensively on James and/or his time. Even the appendixes are interesting, with the first a "lightly annotated" chronological listing of James's books, including citations to the magazines in which many of these books first appeared serially. The second appendix lists "landmarks" of James criticism in chronological order. This is a fine resource for scholars as well as for advanced students, although its state-of-the-art purpose will make an update imperative in a decade or so.
- Peter Dollard, Alma Coll. Lib., Mich.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review

“A narrative history of James criticism by Richard Hocks and annotated chronologies of James's works and of the major critical studies from 1905 to 1991 enhance the value of this unique book, a landmark of James criticism and scholarship, which students and teachers will find as valuable as any single volume on James's work.”–Choice

“Covering all aspects of James studies, the 20 original essays in this companion are divided into sections on "Criticism and Theory," "Fiction," and "Nonfiction." The essays provide excellent critical and bibliographic overviews of the current state of James studies in such areas as James's theory of fiction, his tales, and his "inveterate habit of revising his fiction." The essays are by established scholars, most of whom have published extensively on James and/or his time. Even the appendixes are interesting with the first a "lightly annotated" chronological listing of James's books, including citations to the magazines in which many of these books first appeared serially. The second appendix lists "landmarks" of James criticism in chronological order. This is a fine resource for scholars and advanced students, though its state-of-the-art purpose will make an update imperative in a decade or so.”–Library Journal

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