Henry James and the Queerness of Style
The true meaning of being fashionably late in Henry James’s late works
248 Pages, 6 x 9 in
- Paperback
- 9780816665112
- Published: April 11, 2011
Details
Henry James and the Queerness of Style
ISBN: 9780816665112
Publication date: April 11th, 2011
248 Pages
8 x 5
"Henry James and the Queerness of Style is a brilliant, extraordinarily erudite exemplar of reading and writing as queer practices. It will help to usher in a fresh phase of James studies, in which queerness is the point of embarkation, rather than the ultimate destination." —Gustavus Stadler, Haverford College
For Ohi, there are many elements in the style that make James’s writing queer. But if there is a thematic marker, Ohi shows through his careful engagements with these texts, it is belatedness. The recurrent concern with belatedness, Ohi explains, should be understood not psychologically but stylistically, not as confessing the sad predicament of being out of sync with one’s life but as revealing the consequences of style’s refashioning of experience. Belatedness marks life’s encounter with style, and it describes an experience not of deprivation but of the rich potentiality of the literary work that James calls “freedom.” In Ohi’s reading, belatedness is the indicator not of sublimation or repression, nor of authorial self-sacrifice, but of the potentiality of the literary—and hence of the queerness of style.
Presenting original readings of a series of late Jamesian texts, the book also represents an exciting possibility for queer theory and literary studies in the future: a renewed attention to literary form and a new sounding—energized by literary questions of style and form—of the theoretical implications of queerness.
1. Writing Queerness: Zeugma and Syllepsis in The Golden Bowl
2. The Burden of Residuary Comment: Syntactical Idiosyncrasies in The Wings of the Dove
3. Hover, Torment, Waste: Late Writings and the Great War
4. Lambert Strether's Belatedness: The Ambassadors and the Queer Afterlife of Style
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index