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Conference Presentation Daisy Miller A story by: Henry James English 170W Presented by: Arlene Pan * * * * * * * * * Summary - Switzerland The story begins with Daisy ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Conference Presentation


1
Conference Presentation
  • Daisy Miller
  • A story by
  • Henry James
  • English 170W
  • Presented by
  • Arlene Pan

2
Summary - Switzerland
  • The story begins with Daisy Miller and
    Winterbourne being introduced by Daisy's younger
    brother, Randolph, in Switzerland.
  • Randolph thinks that New York is much better than
    Europe but Daisy thinks that Europe is absolutely
    wonderful.
  • Winterbourne thinks Daisy is beautiful, but he
    finds her demeanor confusing he believes that
    she is a flirtatious young lady.
  • Winterbourne is infatuated with Daisy even though
    his aunt, Mrs. Costello, and the society,
    disapproves Daisy's family has a close
    relationship to their courier, which is
    scandalous.
  • Mrs. Costello believes Daisy to be shameless for
    going off with Winterbourne, who was a stranger
    to her only a half hour before.
  • Winterbourne then tells Daisy that he has to go
    to Geneva the next day. Daisy is disappointed and
    berates him, but asks him to visit her in Rome
    later that year.

3
Summary Rome
  • Winterbourne and Daisy meet in Mrs. Walker's
    parlor she is an American expatriate who's moral
    values have become adapted to those of Italian
    society.
  • Rumors about Daisy meeting with young Italian
    gentlemen make her a social pariah. Winterbourne
    learns of Daisy's intimacy with a young Italian,
    Giovanelli.
  • Daisy doesn't care about the open disapproval of
    the other Americans, and her mother doesn't seem
    to notice the underlying tensions. Winterbourne
    and Mrs. Walker attempt to persuade Daisy to
    separate from Giovanelli, but she refuses.
  • Winterbourne takes a walk through the Colosseum
    and sees Giovanelli and Daisy. Winterbourne is
    upset with Giovanelli and asks him how he could
    dare to take Daisy to a place where she runs the
    risk of "Roman Fever."
  • Daisy says she does not care and Winterbourne
    leaves them. Daisy falls ill, and dies a few days
    later.
  • Winterbourne receives Daisy's last letter before
    her death telling him she cared about his
    perceptions of her. Winterbourne then thinks he's
    spent too long in European society and goes back
    to Geneva.

4
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5
The Quote
  • Though he was impatient to see her, he hardly
    knew what he should say to her about his aunts
    refusal to become acquainted with her but he
    discovered, promptly enough, that with Miss Daisy
    Miller there was no great need of walking on
    tiptoe.
  • He found her that evening in the garden,
    wandering about in the warm starlight like an
    indolent sylph, and swinging to and fro the
    largest fan he had ever beheld.
  • It was ten oclock.
  • He had dined with his aunt, had been sitting with
    her since dinner, and had just taken leave of her
    till the morrow.
  • Miss Daisy Miller seemed very glad to see him
    she declared it was the longest evening she had
    ever passed.

6
The Interpretation
  • Preparing to see Daisy, Winterbourne's excitement
    is obvious, but his excitement is muddled, also,
    by his aunt's disagreement of his associating
    with her Winterbourne was unable to decide how
    to tackle this predicament. This tells us that
    Winterbourne likes Daisy, or is infatuated with
    her beauty, but doesn't know what to think of
    her, due to outside influence. Reading further,
    we are given more insight on Daisy Millers
    character by the insinuation that there was no
    need to for subtlety when it came to Daisy.
  • We are presented with Daisy in the garden almost
    surrounded by a halo of light and then compares
    her to an indolent sylph a lazy, slothful, but
    graceful girl. This presents a differing view
    with negative connotations. The contrasting
    oxymoron shows Winterbourne's indecision. The
    last line shows us that Daisy is interested in
    Winterbourne giving way to belief that this is
    not just what Winterbourne feels, but Daisy's
    interest as well.
  • In a New Critics view, Winterbourne is indecisive
    and relies heavily on other opinions, while Daisy
    can be innocent in her gestures while having
    ulterior motives.

7
Questionable?
  • One of the many questions of Henry James's story
    of Daisy Miller is that while Daisy is
    represented as an innocent young girl who was too
    ignorant of her surroundings
  • Was Daisy as innocent as she was portrayed?
  • Was Daisy a deviant?
  • Or... were those ploys perhaps to validate her
    actions?
  • Was the objective to portray a society that had
    distinct ideas of gender roles?

8
Gender Roles?
  • In Louise Barnett's Jamesian Feminism Women in
    'Daisy Miller', she states While those women
    who accept their circumscribed existence pay
    varying prices of neurotic illness,
    ineffectuality, and hypocrisy, the women who
    ignore social prescription is punished by
    ostracism and death, which is exactly what
    occurs in the book with both Daisy and her
    mother. Daisy's mother is ostracized for her
    daughter's behavior and Daisy eventually dies.
  • Society expected not only women, but everyone to
    abide to a certain code of conduct. Morality was
    a bigger issue for women, so this became a more
    gender-specific concern or condemnation. Women
    could not be in a specific circumstance, or they
    became a social pariah, subject to sanction by
    the masses.

9
Validation?
  • In Joanne Vicker's, Woolson's Response To James
    The Vindication Of The American Heroine, she
    states that James allows Daisy to die from the
    Roman fever in order to play on the ambiguity of
    her morality and her interest in Giovanelli and
    Winterbourne (291).
  • Vicker points out that Henry James wrote the book
    with the intention of allowing Daisy to die so we
    would never find out if the portrayal of Daisy
    was ignorance, innocence, or deviant. In this
    way, the readers would never discover the
    intentions and the story would still continue in
    mystique.
  • I believe that Henry James did portray Daisy as a
    character who's fault was both ignorance and
    deviance. She was a mixture of both, but did not
    understand the consequences of the actions. She
    was a child who only understood happiness.

10
Ignorant or Deviant?
  • In Carol Ohmann's DAISY MILLER A Study Of
    Changing Intentions, she questions if Daisy was
    ignorant or deviant. Daisy strayed from the
    social path and then led a life of being the
    social pariah. Ohmann also speaks about how
    Henry James faces his writing as poetic and then
    changes the metaphysical figure of Daisy to be
    less critical of her character and creates her to
    be more in tune with nature (10). Many of these
    aspects portray Daisy as a child with no ill
    intentions who was unfortunate to be unable to
    adapt to the changes surrounding her.
  • I believe that Daisy Miller was a child who did
    what she wanted with no thought to the
    consequences. She was ignorant and her only blame
    lies in her carefree nature and the restricting
    society that she became infatuated with.
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