1st Edition

Prepossessing Henry James The Strange Freedom

By Julián Jiménez Heffernan Copyright 2023
300 Pages
by Routledge

300 Pages
by Routledge

300 Pages
by Routledge

The novels of Henry James are filled with ghosts, but most of them escape dramatic treatment. These elusive specters are the voices of precursors that haunt his narratives, compromising their constitutive freedom. The Strange Freedom is an examination of the ways James’s fiction is prepossessed by some major voices of the English literary tradition: those of Shakespeare, Richardson, Fielding,... Read more

 

Biography

Julián Jiménez Heffernan (Ph.D. Bologna, Italy) is Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the Universidad de Córdoba, Spain. He has authored three books on Shakespeare, co-edited the collection Community in Twentieth-Century Fiction (2013), and published many essays on Renaissance philosophy, deconstruction, and modern fiction—from Samuel Richardson to Nadine Gordimer. He is currently working on a book on Karl Marx and William Thackeray.

"Reading Jiménez Heffernan's extraordinary evidence of the scope of James's ironically allusive reinvention of the novel in English, one might readily embrace T. S. Eliot's judgment that Henry James was "the most intelligent man of his generation." Reanimating the best James criticism from Edmund Wilson to Tony Tanner, Jiménez Heffernan reconfigures the relation of the English novel to the emergence of literary and philosophical modernity."

--N. Lukacher, emeritus, University of Illinois, CHOICE