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Henry James Goes to Paris - Paperback By Brooks, Peter - GOOD

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Item specifics

Condition
Good: A book that has been read but is in good condition. Very minimal damage to the cover including ...
Brand
Unbranded
Book Title
Henry James Goes to Paris
MPN
Does not apply
ISBN
9780691138428
Subject Area
Biography & Autobiography, Travel, Literary Criticism
Publication Name
Henry James Goes to Paris
Item Length
9.2 in
Publisher
Princeton University Press
Subject
Europe / France, Literary, American / General
Publication Year
2008
Type
Textbook
Format
Trade Paperback
Language
English
Item Height
0.8 in
Author
Peter Brooks
Item Width
6.6 in
Item Weight
15 Oz
Number of Pages
272 Pages

About this product

Product Information

Presents the story of the year - 1875 to 1876 - when the young novelist Henry James moved to Paris, drawn by his literary idols living at the center of the early modern movement in art. This narrative combines biography and criticism and uses James' writings to tell the story from his point of view.

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Princeton University Press
ISBN-10
0691138427
ISBN-13
9780691138428
eBay Product ID (ePID)
109094838

Product Key Features

Author
Peter Brooks
Publication Name
Henry James Goes to Paris
Format
Trade Paperback
Language
English
Subject
Europe / France, Literary, American / General
Publication Year
2008
Type
Textbook
Subject Area
Biography & Autobiography, Travel, Literary Criticism
Number of Pages
272 Pages

Dimensions

Item Length
9.2 in
Item Height
0.8 in
Item Width
6.6 in
Item Weight
15 Oz

Additional Product Features

Intended Audience
College Audience
LeafCats
378
Lc Classification Number
Ps2127.F7b76 2008
Reviews
"Brooks's main thesis is that when James lived in Paris he 'missed' much that was new and exciting. He didn't really like Flaubert's writing, he dismissed the Impressionists, and he found Wagner's music 'boring.' But twenty or more years later, Brooks argues, what James failed to appreciate at the time came back to haunt him and to affect his later great work. Though James was more of a Romantic realist in the tradition of Balzac (with a large taste for melodramatic kitsch and wild and improbable plot twists), he came to appreciate Flaubert's exquisite style and measured realism and to write several important essays on him."-- Edmund V. White, New York Review of Books, Peter Brooks has produced a brilliant and accessible account of a young American landing in Paris and missing the point. In Henry James Goes to Paris . . . Mr. Brooks shows how James' year in the City of Light--1875 to 1876--left him in the dark, baffled about the French avant-garde. -- New York Observer, "A brilliant study of how James's experiences that year lay repressed for two decades in what the novelist called 'the deep well of unconscious cerebration', before he transformed his style. Or, as Brooks, who is one of America's finest literary critics, puts it, how James 'missed much of what he experienced--but missed it, I think, only for the time being.' "-- Frances Wilson, The Daily Telegraph, " Henry James Goes to Paris is a delight to read. Peter Brooks writes with much grace and with an intimate knowledge of James's novels and of the French masters (Flaubert, the Goncourt brothers, Zola) James came to know during his stay in Paris in 1875-76. The central theme of this wide-ranging and original study is James's early misunderstanding and even misreading of the French avant-garde writers that in time, however, contributed to his mature vision of the art of the novel. Brooks treats his subject with much subtlety, solid scholarship, and flexibility of mind." --Victor Brombert, author of Trains of Thought, "[E]ngaging and perceptive. . . . [A]n exceptionally clear-sighted account of James's boldness and importance as a novelist."-- Times Literary Supplement, In his fascinating new study, Henry James Goes to Paris . . . Peter Brooks . . . gives a detailed account of the year James spent there, a year that would shape him forever. . . . Mr. Brooks weaves together episodes from James's year in Paris with his novels, from Roderick Hudson onward, to make plain how painstakingly James absorbed the lessons of the masters even as he seemed to repudiate them. ---Eric Ormsby, The New York Sun, In his fascinating new study,Henry James Goes to Paris. . . Peter Brooks . . . gives a detailed account of the year James spent there, a year that would shape him forever. . . . Mr. Brooks weaves together episodes from James's year in Paris with his novels, from Roderick Hudson onward, to make plain how painstakingly James absorbed the lessons of the masters even as he seemed to repudiate them. -- Eric Ormsby, The New York Sun, This is a perceptive and well-finessed account of the novelist's growth, enlivened by several lightnesses of touch . . . and James should feel well served. -- Ian F. A. Bell, Modern Language Review, "This critical narrative about James's relations with Paris and the circle of writers he encountered when he took up residence there in 1875 is a great pleasure to read. What makes it especially attractive is the fact that Brooks relies so heavily on primary documents. We have the illusion of learning about James directly, often in his own words. Most people today do not read criticism. They read narrative, and that's why biography is so popular. Yet to the degree that criticism can find a narrative form, it will find readers outside a narrow range of specialists. I expect this book to do that." --Michael Gorra, author of The Bells in Their Silence: Travels through Germany, [A] rich and subtly presented case. . . . Henry James Goes to Paris explores the intersection of narrative and criticism, using an explanatory hypothesis of James's development to frame a series of perceptive critical readings. ---John Attridge, Modernism/modernity, "In the autumn of 1875, Henry James arrived in Paris . . . yet, a little more than a year later, he left for London, disappointed and disenchanted. In this masterly critique, Peter Brooks reveals why, and why also it would prove in time to be one of the most important years of his life. . . . With skill and sensitivity and unusual readability, Brooks reveals how, as James matured . . . he came to admire the passion and commitment, if not the work, of these men."-- Anne Haverty, Irish Times, [A] rich and subtly presented case. . . .Henry James Goes to Parisexplores the intersection of narrative and criticism, using an explanatory hypothesis of James's development to frame a series of perceptive critical readings., A brilliant study of how James's experiences that year lay repressed for two decades in what the novelist called 'the deep well of unconscious cerebration', before he transformed his style. Or, as Brooks, who is one of America's finest literary critics, puts it, how James 'missed much of what he experienced--but missed it, I think, only for the time being.' -- Frances Wilson, The Daily Telegraph, "In his fascinating new study, Henry James Goes to Paris . . . Peter Brooks . . . gives a detailed account of the year James spent there, a year that would shape him forever. . . . Mr. Brooks weaves together episodes from James's year in Paris with his novels, from Roderick Hudson onward, to make plain how painstakingly James absorbed the lessons of the masters even as he seemed to repudiate them."-- Eric Ormsby, The New York Sun, "[W]onderfully lively and original synthesis of biography, criticism and speculation." --Josh Cohen, European Legacy, "This is a thoroughly well-crafted, nuanced, and very Jamesian story about cross-cultural contact, modernity, and how one fine mind assimilated the most advanced (if not necessarily the 'best') artistic theories of his day. The result is a live picture of a crucial moment in the development of the novel." --Nicholas Dames, Columbia University, "[W]onderfully lively and original synthesis of biography, criticism and speculation."-- Josh Cohen, European Legacy, [E]ngaging and perceptive. . . . [A]n exceptionally clear-sighted account of James's boldness and importance as a novelist., [W]onderfully lively and original synthesis of biography, criticism and speculation. ---Josh Cohen, European Legacy, "Brooks's main thesis is that when James lived in Paris he 'missed' much that was new and exciting. He didn't really like Flaubert's writing, he dismissed the Impressionists, and he found Wagner's music 'boring.' But twenty or more years later, Brooks argues, what James failed to appreciate at the time came back to haunt him and to affect his later great work. Though James was more of a Romantic realist in the tradition of Balzac (with a large taste for melodramatic kitsch and wild and improbable plot twists), he came to appreciate Flaubert's exquisite style and measured realism and to write several important essays on him." --Edmund V. White, New York Review of Books, "This critical narrative about James's relations with Paris and the circle of writers he encountered when he took up residence there in 1875 is a great pleasure to read. What makes it especially attractive is the fact that Brooks relies so heavily on primary documents. We have the illusion of learning about James directly, often in his own words. Most people today do not read criticism. They read narrative, and that's why biography is so popular. Yet to the degree that criticism can find a narrative form, it will find readers outside a narrow range of specialists. I expect this book to do that." 'e"Michael Gorra, author of The Bells in Their Silence: Travels through Germany, "Under the guise of simply 'telling a story' about the young Henry James's stay in Paris in 1875-76, Peter Brooks describes the progressive emergence of the whole of novelistic modernity during the turn from the nineteenth to the twentieth century. You have to be, like Brooks, both historian and theorist, a scholar both of things French and American, to so masterfully carry out this project." --Philippe Hamon, Professor Emeritus, La Sorbonne Nouvelle, "In this affectionate study, Brooks concedes that the young James 'missed the point, completely,' but argues that what he observed in Paris deeply affected him, and was especially crucial to his late novels." -- The New Yorker, Peter Brooks is an engaging, lucid writer with a marvelous intuitive grasp of Jamesian complexities and a rare gifting for integrating biography, history, gossip and literary criticism. -- David Laskin, Seattle Times, "In the autumn of 1875, Henry James arrived in Paris . . . yet, a little more than a year later, he left for London, disappointed and disenchanted. In this masterly critique, Peter Brooks reveals why, and why also it would prove in time to be one of the most important years of his life. . . . With skill and sensitivity and unusual readability, Brooks reveals how, as James matured . . . he came to admire the passion and commitment, if not the work, of these men." --Anne Haverty, Irish Times, "[E]ngaging and perceptive. . . . [A]n exceptionally clear-sighted account of Jamess boldness and importance as a novelist."-- Times Literary Supplement, In his fascinating new study, Henry James Goes to Paris . . . Peter Brooks . . . gives a detailed account of the year James spent there, a year that would shape him forever. . . . Mr. Brooks weaves together episodes from James's year in Paris with his novels, from Roderick Hudson onward, to make plain how painstakingly James absorbed the lessons of the masters even as he seemed to repudiate them. -- Eric Ormsby, The New York Sun, Peter Brooks is an engaging, lucid writer with a marvelous intuitive grasp of Jamesian complexities and a rare gifting for integrating biography, history, gossip and literary criticism. ---David Laskin, Seattle Times, "Unsurpassed as a James reader, Brooks grounds his larger argument in penetrating analyses of not only What Maisie Knew and The Golden Bowl but of two early signposts of James' development, The American and The Tragic Muse . These readings will surely lend new stature, and generate new interest, in all these novels." --David M. Robinson, American Literary Realism, "[A] rich and subtly presented case. . . . Henry James Goes to Paris explores the intersection of narrative and criticism, using an explanatory hypothesis of James's development to frame a series of perceptive critical readings."-- John Attridge, Modernism/modernity, "This is a perceptive and well-finessed account of the novelist's growth, enlivened by several lightnesses of touch . . . and James should feel well served." --Ian F. A. Bell, Modern Language Review, "Under the guise of simply 'telling a story' about the young Henry James's stay in Paris in 1875-76, Peter Brooks describes the progressive emergence of the whole of novelistic modernity during the turn from the nineteenth to the twentieth century. You have to be, like Brooks, both historian and theorist, a scholar both of things French and American, to so masterfully carry out this project." 'e"Philippe Hamon, Professor Emeritus, La Sorbonne Nouvelle, In the autumn of 1875, Henry James arrived in Paris . . . yet, a little more than a year later, he left for London, disappointed and disenchanted. In this masterly critique, Peter Brooks reveals why, and why also it would prove in time to be one of the most important years of his life. . . . With skill and sensitivity and unusual readability, Brooks reveals how, as James matured . . . he came to admire the passion and commitment, if not the work, of these men. -- Anne Haverty, Irish Times, Peter Brooks has produced a brilliant and accessible account of a young American landing in Paris and missing the point. InHenry James Goes to Paris. . . Mr. Brooks shows how James' year in the City of Light--1875 to 1876--left him in the dark, baffled about the French avant-garde., " Henry James Goes to Paris is a delight to read. Peter Brooks writes with much grace and with an intimate knowledge of James's novels and of the French masters (Flaubert, the Goncourt brothers, Zola) James came to know during his stay in Paris in 1875-76. The central theme of this wide-ranging and original study is James's early misunderstanding and even misreading of the French avant-garde writers that in time, however, contributed to his mature vision of the art of the novel. Brooks treats his subject with much subtlety, solid scholarship, and flexibility of mind." 'e"Victor Brombert, author of Trains of Thought, Unsurpassed as a James reader, Brooks grounds his larger argument in penetrating analyses of not onlyWhat Maisie KnewandThe Golden Bowlbut of two early signposts of James' development,The AmericanandThe Tragic Muse. These readings will surely lend new stature, and generate new interest, in all these novels., "In Brooks' excellent account of [James's] time in Paris we can begin to understand how the Balzacian disciple became the Master of the novel we know and still love to read today."-- Book Depository, A brilliant study of how James's experiences that year lay repressed for two decades in what the novelist called 'the deep well of unconscious cerebration', before he transformed his style. Or, as Brooks, who is one of America's finest literary critics, puts it, how James 'missed much of what he experienced--but missed it, I think, only for the time being.' ---Frances Wilson, The Daily Telegraph, "In his fascinating new study, Henry James Goes to Paris . . . Peter Brooks . . . gives a detailed account of the year James spent there, a year that would shape him forever. . . . Mr. Brooks weaves together episodes from James's year in Paris with his novels, from Roderick Hudson onward, to make plain how painstakingly James absorbed the lessons of the masters even as he seemed to repudiate them." --Eric Ormsby, The New York Sun, Brooks's main thesis is that when James lived in Paris he 'missed' much that was new and exciting. He didn't really like Flaubert's writing, he dismissed the Impressionists, and he found Wagner's music 'boring.' But twenty or more years later, Brooks argues, what James failed to appreciate at the time came back to haunt him and to affect his later great work. Though James was more of a Romantic realist in the tradition of Balzac (with a large taste for melodramatic kitsch and wild and improbable plot twists), he came to appreciate Flaubert's exquisite style and measured realism and to write several important essays on him. -- Edmund V. White, New York Review of Books, Peter Brooks has produced a brilliant and accessible account of a young American landing in Paris and missing the point. In Henry James Goes to Paris . . . Mr. Brooks shows how James' year in the City of Light--1875 to 1876--left him in the dark, baffled about the French avant-garde., "This is a thoroughly well-crafted, nuanced, and very Jamesian story about cross-cultural contact, modernity, and how one fine mind assimilated the most advanced (if not necessarily the 'best') artistic theories of his day. The result is a live picture of a crucial moment in the development of the novel." 'e"Nicholas Dames, Columbia University, "This is a perceptive and well-finessed account of the novelist's growth, enlivened by several lightnesses of touch . . . and James should feel well served."-- Ian F. A. Bell, Modern Language Review, In Brooks' excellent account of [James's] time in Paris we can begin to understand how the Balzacian disciple became the Master of the novel we know and still love to read today., "[E]ngaging and perceptive. . . . [A]n exceptionally clear-sighted account of James's boldness and importance as a novelist." -- Times Literary Supplement, This is a perceptive and well-finessed account of the novelist's growth, enlivened by several lightnesses of touch . . . and James should feel well served. ---Ian F. A. Bell, Modern Language Review, "In this affectionate study, Brooks concedes that the young James 'missed the point, completely,' but argues that what he observed in Paris deeply affected him, and was especially crucial to his late novels."-- The New Yorker, Peter Brooks is an engaging, lucid writer with a marvelous intuitive grasp of Jamesian complexities and a rare gifting for integrating biography, history, gossip and literary criticism., "A brilliant study of how James's experiences that year lay repressed for two decades in what the novelist called 'the deep well of unconscious cerebration', before he transformed his style. Or, as Brooks, who is one of America's finest literary critics, puts it, how James 'missed much of what he experienced--but missed it, I think, only for the time being.' " --Frances Wilson, The Daily Telegraph, In Brooks' excellent account of [James's] time in Paris we can begin to understand how the Balzacian disciple became the Master of the novel we know and still love to read today. -- Book Depository, "Peter Brooks is an engaging, lucid writer with a marvelous intuitive grasp of Jamesian complexities and a rare gifting for integrating biography, history, gossip and literary criticism." --David Laskin, Seattle Times, "In Brooks' excellent account of [James's] time in Paris we can begin to understand how the Balzacian disciple became the Master of the novel we know and still love to read today." -- Book Depository, Unsurpassed as a James reader, Brooks grounds his larger argument in penetrating analyses of not only What Maisie Knew and The Golden Bowl but of two early signposts of James' development, The American and The Tragic Muse . These readings will surely lend new stature, and generate new interest, in all these novels. -- David M. Robinson, American Literary Realism, In the autumn of 1875, Henry James arrived in Paris . . . yet, a little more than a year later, he left for London, disappointed and disenchanted. In this masterly critique, Peter Brooks reveals why, and why also it would prove in time to be one of the most important years of his life. . . . With skill and sensitivity and unusual readability, Brooks reveals how, as James matured . . . he came to admire the passion and commitment, if not the work, of these men., In this affectionate study, Brooks concedes that the young James 'missed the point, completely,' but argues that what he observed in Paris deeply affected him, and was especially crucial to his late novels. -- The New Yorker, This is a perceptive and well-finessed account of the novelist's growth, enlivened by several lightnesses of touch . . . and James should feel well served., "Peter Brooks has produced a brilliant and accessible account of a young American landing in Paris and missing the point. In Henry James Goes to Paris . . . Mr. Brooks shows how James' year in the City of Light--1875 to 1876--left him in the dark, baffled about the French avant-garde."-- New York Observer, A brilliant study of how James's experiences that year lay repressed for two decades in what the novelist called 'the deep well of unconscious cerebration', before he transformed his style. Or, as Brooks, who is one of America's finest literary critics, puts it, how James 'missed much of what he experienced--but missed it, I think, only for the time being.', In the autumn of 1875, Henry James arrived in Paris . . . yet, a little more than a year later, he left for London, disappointed and disenchanted. In this masterly critique, Peter Brooks reveals why, and why also it would prove in time to be one of the most important years of his life. . . . With skill and sensitivity and unusual readability, Brooks reveals how, as James matured . . . he came to admire the passion and commitment, if not the work, of these men. ---Anne Haverty, Irish Times, [A] rich and subtly presented case. . . . Henry James Goes to Paris explores the intersection of narrative and criticism, using an explanatory hypothesis of James's development to frame a series of perceptive critical readings., Unsurpassed as a James reader, Brooks grounds his larger argument in penetrating analyses of not only What Maisie Knew and The Golden Bowl but of two early signposts of James' development, The American and The Tragic Muse . These readings will surely lend new stature, and generate new interest, in all these novels. ---David M. Robinson, American Literary Realism, "Peter Brooks is an engaging, lucid writer with a marvelous intuitive grasp of Jamesian complexities and a rare gifting for integrating biography, history, gossip and literary criticism."-- David Laskin, Seattle Times, Unsurpassed as a James reader, Brooks grounds his larger argument in penetrating analyses of not only What Maisie Knew and The Golden Bowl but of two early signposts of James' development, The American and The Tragic Muse . These readings will surely lend new stature, and generate new interest, in all these novels., In his fascinating new study, Henry James Goes to Paris . . . Peter Brooks . . . gives a detailed account of the year James spent there, a year that would shape him forever. . . . Mr. Brooks weaves together episodes from James's year in Paris with his novels, from Roderick Hudson onward, to make plain how painstakingly James absorbed the lessons of the masters even as he seemed to repudiate them., [W]onderfully lively and original synthesis of biography, criticism and speculation. -- Josh Cohen, European Legacy, "Peter Brooks has produced a brilliant and accessible account of a young American landing in Paris and missing the point. In Henry James Goes to Paris . . . Mr. Brooks shows how James' year in the City of Light--1875 to 1876--left him in the dark, baffled about the French avant-garde." -- New York Observer, [A] rich and subtly presented case. . . .Henry James Goes to Parisexplores the intersection of narrative and criticism, using an explanatory hypothesis of James's development to frame a series of perceptive critical readings. -- John Attridge, Modernism/modernity, Brooks's main thesis is that when James lived in Paris he 'missed' much that was new and exciting. He didn't really like Flaubert's writing, he dismissed the Impressionists, and he found Wagner's music 'boring.' But twenty or more years later, Brooks argues, what James failed to appreciate at the time came back to haunt him and to affect his later great work. Though James was more of a Romantic realist in the tradition of Balzac (with a large taste for melodramatic kitsch and wild and improbable plot twists), he came to appreciate Flaubert's exquisite style and measured realism and to write several important essays on him. ---Edmund V. White, New York Review of Books, [E]ngaging and perceptive. . . . [A]n exceptionally clear-sighted account of James's boldness and importance as a novelist. -- Times Literary Supplement, In this affectionate study, Brooks concedes that the young James 'missed the point, completely,' but argues that what he observed in Paris deeply affected him, and was especially crucial to his late novels., Unsurpassed as a James reader, Brooks grounds his larger argument in penetrating analyses of not onlyWhat Maisie KnewandThe Golden Bowlbut of two early signposts of James' development,The AmericanandThe Tragic Muse. These readings will surely lend new stature, and generate new interest, in all these novels. -- David M. Robinson, American Literary Realism, In his fascinating new study,Henry James Goes to Paris. . . Peter Brooks . . . gives a detailed account of the year James spent there, a year that would shape him forever. . . . Mr. Brooks weaves together episodes from James's year in Paris with his novels, from Roderick Hudson onward, to make plain how painstakingly James absorbed the lessons of the masters even as he seemed to repudiate them., "Unsurpassed as a James reader, Brooks grounds his larger argument in penetrating analyses of not only What Maisie Knew and The Golden Bowl but of two early signposts of James' development, The American and The Tragic Muse . These readings will surely lend new stature, and generate new interest, in all these novels."-- David M. Robinson, American Literary Realism, Peter Brooks has produced a brilliant and accessible account of a young American landing in Paris and missing the point. InHenry James Goes to Paris. . . Mr. Brooks shows how James' year in the City of Light--1875 to 1876--left him in the dark, baffled about the French avant-garde. -- New York Observer, Brooks's main thesis is that when James lived in Paris he 'missed' much that was new and exciting. He didn't really like Flaubert's writing, he dismissed the Impressionists, and he found Wagner's music 'boring.' But twenty or more years later, Brooks argues, what James failed to appreciate at the time came back to haunt him and to affect his later great work. Though James was more of a Romantic realist in the tradition of Balzac (with a large taste for melodramatic kitsch and wild and improbable plot twists), he came to appreciate Flaubert's exquisite style and measured realism and to write several important essays on him., "[A] rich and subtly presented case. . . . Henry James Goes to Paris explores the intersection of narrative and criticism, using an explanatory hypothesis of James's development to frame a series of perceptive critical readings." --John Attridge, Modernism/modernity, [A] rich and subtly presented case. . . . Henry James Goes to Paris explores the intersection of narrative and criticism, using an explanatory hypothesis of James's development to frame a series of perceptive critical readings. -- John Attridge, Modernism/modernity
Table of Content
Introduction 1 Chapter 1. To Paris 7 2. The Dream of an Intenser Experience 53 Chapter 3. What a Droll Thing to Represent 79 Chapter 4. Flaubert's Nerds 101 Chapter 5. The Quickened Notation of Our Modernity 129 Chapter 6. The Death of Zola, Sex in the French Novel, and the Improper 156 Chapter 7. For the Sake of This End 177 Epilogue: Chariot of Fire 205 Notes 211 Bibliography 233 Acknowledgments 241 Index 243
Copyright Date
2007
Dewey Decimal
813/.4 B
Dewey Edition
22
Illustrated
Yes

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