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The Diary of a Man of Fiftyinternational tales by the master Henry James was a prolific writer of stories, in addition to his many great novels. There are over a hundred in the twelve volumes of the Collected Tales - many of them so long that they become 'long short stories' or even novellas, as in the case of The Turn of the Screw and The Aspern Papers.
It's a story about 'dangerous' women and the fear of marriage and emotional commitment - and you don't need a brass plaque on your door to realise that the tale is also crying out for interpretation as a rationalisation of James' own homo-eroticism. It also brings into play another of James' regular themes - the tensions and contradictions between 'new' American and 'old' European cultures. This volume also contains two other stories written in a form which James used very rarely - the exchange of letters. 'A Bundle of Letters' is Jane Austen (and even Smollett) revisited. The individual correspondents make self-satirising revelations of themselves - the gushingly enthusiastic aesthete; the slightly over-confident New Woman - many of which could be said to be aspects of James' own character, exaggerated for effect. English and American tourists are staying with a family in Paris to learn the language, but where it seems they spend most of their time talking to each other. 'The Point of View' uses the same techniques, but the setting this time is America - presenting both its views of Europe and its views on America itself. One of the characters from the earlier story (Louis Levant, the over-developed art lover) crops up again, and seems to represent almost a satirical portrait of James himself - the American viewing his native land after many years living in Europe. But it is the sane and sober observations of the fifty year old Miss Sturdy which are probably a closer match to James' own. He even includes a satirical portrait of himself in the letter of a Frenchman reporting on the absence of American culture to a colleague back in Paris:
And if you wish to see Henry James as a social and political prophet, you need look no further than these lines, penned by a pro-Yankee character, tired of world travel, and glad to be back home:
Those words come from a story written one hundred and twenty seven years ago, but they might have been written last week. © Roy Johnson 2009 [more HENRY JAMES materials] Henry James, The Diary of a Man of Fifty, London: Hesperus Press, 2008, pp.113, ISBN 1843911787 |
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