‘No absolute privacy’: Henry James and the Ethics of Reading Authors’ Letters

Authors’ private letters play a significant role in Henry James’s fiction, literary criticism and in his literary and authorial legacy. They are privileged discursive objects activating fundamental issues of privacy and publicity, canonicity and the material condition of literature. The letter is a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jakob Stougaard-Nielsen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ghent University 2012-05-01
Series:Authorship
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ojs.ugent.be/authorship/article/view/765/759
Description
Summary:Authors’ private letters play a significant role in Henry James’s fiction, literary criticism and in his literary and authorial legacy. They are privileged discursive objects activating fundamental issues of privacy and publicity, canonicity and the material condition of literature. The letter is a contested discursive object in James’s work, since it is at one and the same time a potent figure for authenticity and interiority, and consequently poses a threat to the author’s desire to control his own literary corpus and his privacy. In this article, James’s personal and private investment in designing his literary testament (his private letters and his definitive collected edition) is discussed in the context of his ethical and aesthetic concerns with reading the publications of authors’ private correspondences.
ISSN:2034-4643