Henry James was born on this day, in 1843, in NYC, to an imminent,
intellectual American family, & grew up & went to school in Europe
& New England.
James's writing career was long & prolific. In 5 decades he wrote
30+ novels & hundreds of short stories, articles & essays. His role was
significant in the development of the novel, innovative in the use of the interior
monologue as narrative.
His work was extremely popular. James continued, in old
age, to produce world class work: The Wings of the Dove (1902), The Ambassadors
(1903) & The Golden Bowl (1904) are considered his masterpieces. They have all been made in to very good films.
James's sexuality remained a subject of debate for
decades because of his famous friendships with women; because many critics were
unable to read his homosexuality into his work; & because in literary
circles, while he was acknowledged to be homosexual in his interests, the
common opinion was that he was basically asexual.
From his journals & letters it is clear that James
enjoyed close relationships of a romantic, even erotic, nature with several
young men of his acquaintance. He may have remained in the closet due to that
pesky Oscar Wilde, whose flamboyancy he abhorred, & whose
scandalous trial drove most of gay society back to hiding their loves &
lives.
James on Wilde: “hideously, atrociously dramatic & really
interesting. It is the squalid gratuitousness of it all, of the mere exposure that
blurs the spectacle. But the fall, to that sordid prison-cell & this gulf
of obscenity over which the ghoulish public hangs & gloats, it is beyond
any utterance of irony or any pang of compassion! He was never in the smallest
degree interesting to me, but this hideous human history has made him so in a
manner.”
In 1876, James met & fell in love with Paul Joukowsky,
a young Russian painter & intellectual. Although time with
Joukowsky was short-lived, but the friendships he enjoyed with other men would endure
for many years. His attachment to Henrik Andersen, a young sculptor, generated
an intensely erotic correspondence. James treasured his relationship with Andersen,
& this relationship was to provide him with a source of joy throughout his
later life.
Poor James, caught in conflicting cultural
considerations: an American living in Europe, a gay man living in a
heterosexual world, but as closeted gay man he was able to transform his
personal difficulties into novels that give us the essence of an important time
of change in society & literature in a most challenging way.


His WASHINGTON SQUARE was a wonderful read. I am glad for this here post.
ReplyDeleteHJ was very close to Isabella Stewart Gardner in whose Boston salon he met many of the men with whom he was to become involved.
ReplyDeletehttp://youtu.be/1taC3JjIOkM
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