(De)Facing Aestheticism in The Outcry
Symbiosis 5.2 (2001) 159-71
Author: Sheila Teahan
15 Pages
This micro-ebook, "(De)Facing Aestheticism in ‘The Outcry’" by Sheila Teahan, offers a compelling analysis of Henry James's novel "The Outcry" and its engagement with British aestheticism. Originally published in Symbiosis: a Journal of Anglo-American Literary Relations, this essay examines James's transition from drama to novel form and the implications of his revisions. Teahan delves into the unstable oppositions between privacy and publicity, aesthetic and monetary value, providing a critical re-evaluation of one of James's lesser-known works. This edition is essential for scholars and enthusiasts of Henry James, literary criticism, and aestheticism.
Symbiosis 5.2 (2001) 159-71
Author: Sheila Teahan
15 Pages
This micro-ebook, "(De)Facing Aestheticism in ‘The Outcry’" by Sheila Teahan, offers a compelling analysis of Henry James's novel "The Outcry" and its engagement with British aestheticism. Originally published in Symbiosis: a Journal of Anglo-American Literary Relations, this essay examines James's transition from drama to novel form and the implications of his revisions. Teahan delves into the unstable oppositions between privacy and publicity, aesthetic and monetary value, providing a critical re-evaluation of one of James's lesser-known works. This edition is essential for scholars and enthusiasts of Henry James, literary criticism, and aestheticism.
Symbiosis 5.2 (2001) 159-71
Author: Sheila Teahan
15 Pages
This micro-ebook, "(De)Facing Aestheticism in ‘The Outcry’" by Sheila Teahan, offers a compelling analysis of Henry James's novel "The Outcry" and its engagement with British aestheticism. Originally published in Symbiosis: a Journal of Anglo-American Literary Relations, this essay examines James's transition from drama to novel form and the implications of his revisions. Teahan delves into the unstable oppositions between privacy and publicity, aesthetic and monetary value, providing a critical re-evaluation of one of James's lesser-known works. This edition is essential for scholars and enthusiasts of Henry James, literary criticism, and aestheticism.