Title: Henry James and The Turn of the Screw
1Henry James and The Turn of the Screw
2Henry James
- I. The Importance of Henry James
- The main expression of nineteenth century
consciousness is in proseHenry James was the
first person to add anything to the art of the
nineteenth century novel not already known to the
French. - Ezra Pound, - How to Read, 1929
3Henry JamesII. The Gothic Novel and English
Tradition The Gothic novel or Gothic romance is
a type of fiction inaugurated by Horace
Walpoles The Castle of Otranto A Gothic Story
(1764) -the subtitle refers to its setting in the
middle ages - and which flourished in the early
19th century. Following Walpoles example,
authors of such stories set their stories in the
medieval period, often in a gloomy castle replete
with dungeons, subterranean passages, and sliding
panels, and made bountiful use of ghosts,
mysterious disappearances, and other sensational
and supernatural occurrences
4Henry JamesII. The Gothic Novel and English
Tradition their principal aim was to evoke
chilling terror by exploiting mystery and a
variety of horrorsthe best of them opened up to
fiction the realm of the irrational and perverse
impulses and the nightmarish terrors that lie
beneath the orderly surface of the civilized
mind.- M. H. Abrams
5Henry James II. The Gothic Novel and English
Tradition
- Classic Gothic Novels
- Vathek
- William Beckford (1786)
- The Mysteries of Udolpho Ann Radcliffe
(1794) - The Monk
- Matthew Gregory Lewis (1797)
6Henry JamesII. The Gothic Novel and English
Tradition Later Novels with Gothic
ElementsThese novels do not necessarily have a
medieval setting, but do have an atmosphere of
gloom and terror, represent events which are
uncanny, macabre or melodramatically violent,
and/or deal with characters with aberrant
psychological states.
7Henry JamesII. The Gothic Novel and English
Tradition ExamplesCaleb Williams, William
Godwin (1794)Frankenstein, Mary Shelley
(1817)Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte (1847)Bleak
House, Charles Dickens (1852)Great Expectations,
C. Dickens (1860)Dracula, Bram Stoker (1897)
8Henry James
- III. Sigmund Freud and the Unconscious1880s
Studies hysteria in women1890s Develops the
talking cure psychoanalysis
9Henry James
- III. Sigmund Freud and the Unconscious 1890s
Traces many problems in his patientsto sexual
abuse in childhood 1895 Publishes Studies in
Hysteriain which he discusses his findings about
childhood sexuality and connects hysteria to
problems of sexual abuse in childhood Freuds
theories are not well received by psychiatrists.
10Henry James
- III. Sigmund Freud and the Unconscious 1897
Freud abandons his early theories and starts to
develop the idea of the Oedipus Complex. It is
well-received by other psychiatrists. He
continues to develop this theory for the rest of
his life.
11Henry James
- IV. William James Brother of Henry James,
prominent psychologist, theologian and
philosopher. Known for his theories of
pragmatism, education, religion and mysticism.
Professor at Harvard and important figure of his
time.
12Henry James
- V. A Definition of Horror
-
- "Horror defines and redefines, clarifies and
obscures the relationship between the human and
the monstrous, the normal and the aberrant, the
sane and the mad, the natural and the
supernatural, the conscious and the unconscious,
the daydream and the nightmare, the civilized and
the primitive." - - Gregory A. Waller, 1987
13Henry James
- VI. Reviews of The Turn of the Screw
- Mr. Jamess story is perhapsallegoricalbut
the allegory is not so clear. We have called it
horribly successful, and the phrase seems to
still stand, on second thought, to express the
awful, almost overpowering sense of evil that
human nature is subject to derive from it by the
sensitive reader. - - New York Times Review, 1898
14Henry James
- VI. Reviews of The Turn of the Screw
-
- This story concerns itself with the problem of
evil, from which men of Puritan ancestry seem
never able to entirely detach themselves. - - The Outlook, 1898
15Henry James
- VI. Reviews of The Turn of the Screw
-
- The Turn of the Screw is the most hopelessly
evil story that we have ever read in any
literature, ancient or modern. -
- - The Independent, 1899
16Henry James
- VI. Reviews of The Turn of the Screw
- The Turn of the Screw is at once the most
horrific and tender tale of the nineteenth
century. There is no excellent beauty, said
Lord Bacon, that hath not some strangeness in
the proportion. - - Oscar Cargill, 1963