The Relationship between Henry and William James and its Repercussions on the Novelist's Work
According to Henry James's biographers, there was a clear sibling rivalry between him and his brother. The young Henry could not compete with William because of his own mild character, nor accompany him in the boys' games, always presided by his eider brother. The novelist could...
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Universidad de Alicante
1989-12-01
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doaj-0b4ca32fe40f488c94c164995a5fa7fc2020-11-25T01:22:55ZengUniversidad de AlicanteRevista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses0214-48082171-861X1989-12-012710.14198/raei.1989.2.024339The Relationship between Henry and William James and its Repercussions on the Novelist's WorkÁlvarez Calleja, María Antonia According to Henry James's biographers, there was a clear sibling rivalry between him and his brother. The young Henry could not compete with William because of his own mild character, nor accompany him in the boys' games, always presided by his eider brother. The novelist could yet remember, at the end of his life, William's insult: "I play with boys who curse and swear," while with a mixture of affection and praise, describes the philosopher in his autobiography as a distant and elusive figure -"William was always round the comer and out of sight"- and complains of never being in the same classroom, even though the difference of age was just sixteenth months. This rivalry marked the writer; hence his predilection for second sons through all his fiction: Roderick Hudson, Morgan in "The Pupil," Kate Croy, Owen Wingrave or Valentin in The American, among other main characters. Henry could not equal William's action, but he would develop his imagination and reach the summit of his career, becoming the father of the modern English novel.https://raei.ua.es/article/view/1989-n2-relacion-henry-william-james-y-repercusiones-en-la-obra-del-novelista |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Álvarez Calleja, María Antonia |
spellingShingle |
Álvarez Calleja, María Antonia The Relationship between Henry and William James and its Repercussions on the Novelist's Work Revista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses |
author_facet |
Álvarez Calleja, María Antonia |
author_sort |
Álvarez Calleja, María Antonia |
title |
The Relationship between Henry and William James and its Repercussions on the Novelist's Work |
title_short |
The Relationship between Henry and William James and its Repercussions on the Novelist's Work |
title_full |
The Relationship between Henry and William James and its Repercussions on the Novelist's Work |
title_fullStr |
The Relationship between Henry and William James and its Repercussions on the Novelist's Work |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Relationship between Henry and William James and its Repercussions on the Novelist's Work |
title_sort |
relationship between henry and william james and its repercussions on the novelist's work |
publisher |
Universidad de Alicante |
series |
Revista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses |
issn |
0214-4808 2171-861X |
publishDate |
1989-12-01 |
description |
According to Henry James's biographers, there was a clear sibling rivalry between him and his brother. The young Henry could not compete with William because of his own mild character, nor accompany him in the boys' games, always presided by his eider brother. The novelist could yet remember, at the end of his life, William's insult: "I play with boys who curse and swear," while with a mixture of affection and praise, describes the philosopher in his autobiography as a distant and elusive figure -"William was always round the comer and out of sight"- and complains of never being in the same classroom, even though the difference of age was just sixteenth months. This rivalry marked the writer; hence his predilection for second sons through all his fiction: Roderick Hudson, Morgan in "The Pupil," Kate Croy, Owen Wingrave or Valentin in The American, among other main characters. Henry could not equal William's action, but he would develop his imagination and reach the summit of his career, becoming the father of the modern English novel. |
url |
https://raei.ua.es/article/view/1989-n2-relacion-henry-william-james-y-repercusiones-en-la-obra-del-novelista |
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