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A Conversation Among Himselves: Change and the Style of Henry James. David L. Hoover New York University. Style in Fiction Symposium (SIFS) PALA International Symposium 11th March 2006, Lancaster University. The “Early” Style. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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A Conversation Among Himselves: Change and the Style of Henry
James
Style in Fiction Symposium (SIFS)PALA International Symposium
11th March 2006, Lancaster University
David L. HooverNew York University
The “Early” StyleNewman looked at her a moment; he saw that she was pretty, but he was not in the least dazzled. He remembered poor M. Nioche's solicitude for her ‘innocence,’ and he laughed out again as his eyes met hers. Her face was the oddest mixture of youth and maturity, and beneath her candid brow her searching little smile seemed to contain a world of ambiguous intentions. She was pretty enough, certainly, to make her father nervous; but, as regards her innocence, Newman felt ready on the spot to affirm that she had never parted with it. She had simply never had any; she had been looking at the world since she was ten years old, and he would have been a wise man who could tell her any secrets. The American (1877 [1879 edition])
The “Late” StyleThat brought back to Maisie--it was a roundabout way--the beauty and antiquity of her connexion with the flower of the Overmores as well as that lady's own grace and charm, her peculiar prettiness and cleverness and even her peculiar tribulations. A hundred things hummed at the back of her head, but two of these were simple enough. Mrs. Beale was by the way, after all, just her stepmother and her relative. She was just--and partly for that very reason--Sir Claude's greatest intimate (‘lady-intimate’ was Maisie's term) so that what together they were on Mrs. Wix's prescription to give up and break short off with was for one of them his particular favourite and for the other her father's wife. What Maisie Knew (1897: NYE,1908)
Cluster Analysis—5 Authors—983 MFW
20 Novels (23 Editions) by Henry James• Early (1871-81):• Watch and Ward, 1871*• Roderick Hudson, 1875• The American, 1877• Daisy Miller, 1878• The Europeans, 1878*• Confidence, 1880*• Washington Square, 1881*• The Portrait of a Lady, 1881
• Intermediate (1886-90):• The Bostonians, 1886*• The Princess Casamassima,
1886• The Reverberator, 1888 (1908)• The Tragic Muse, 1890
• Late (1897-17):• The Spoils of Poynton, 1897• What Maisie Knew, 1897 (1908)• The Awkward Age, 1899• The Sacred Fount, 1901*• The Wings of the Dove, 1902
(1909)• The Ambassadors, 1903 (1909)• The Golden Bowl, 1904 (1909)• The Ivory Tower, 1917
• Early (revised versions):• Daisy Miller, 1878 (1909)• The Portrait of a Lady, 1881
(1908)• The American, 1877 (1907)
Cluster Analysis of 23 Editions
Fifteen Novels by Charles Dickens
Eleven Novels by Willa Cather
Some Contractions in 3 Periods
Personal Pronouns in 3 Periods
Pronouns increasing, early < intermediate < late:
– her, herself, it, itself, their, them, us
Pronouns increasing, early < late:
– she, hers, him
Pronouns decreasing, late < intermediate < early:
– he, his, himself
169 Function Words in 3 Periods
Pattern Expected Actual
Late<Inter.<Early (waning) 28 27
Inter.<Late<Early 28 12
Late<Early<Inter. 28 13
Early<Late<Inter. 28 19
Inter.<Early<Late 28 23
Early<Inter.<Late (waxing) 28 75
Variable Speech Markers in 3 Periods
The 40 Most Variable Waxing and Waning NounsWaxing nouns:
doom, intervention, nervousness, yearning, detachment, diplomacy, plea, clearness, seconds, gaiety, possibility, relation, minute, passage, reference, events, approach, extent, spot, pressure, effect, conditions, presence, freedom, question, rate, ways, possession, difference, danger, difficulty, consequence, sign, breath, vision, form, case, relief, fear, minutes
Waning nouns:
enterprise, tresses, foreigners, compliments, virtues, rapidity, peculiarities, coquette, physiognomy, talents, suitor, dresses, advice, temper, Europe, Italy, entertainment, forehead, liberty, winter, circumstances, dozen, satisfaction, city, country, conversation, year, family, heart, son, genius, fortune, fellow, society, pictures, years, glance, half, evening, to-morrow
Waxing and Waning Nouns of TimeWaxing:
• seconds
• minute, minutes
• hours
Late > Early:
• hour
• second
Waning:
• year, years
• month, months
• week
• days
Early > Late:
• day
Waxing Families of Verbs• breathe, breathed, breath, breathless
– (breathing late > early)
• protect, protected, protection
• produce, produced, producing, product (production nearly constant)
• pull, pulled (pulling frequent early and late)
• require, requires, required (requiring late> early)
• smoke, smoked (smoking late > early)
• worry, worried (worrying early > late)
Waning Families of Verbs• displease, displeased, displeasure (displeasing
early > late)• murmur, murmuring, murmured• spend, spending• beg, begged• gaze, gazing, gazed• marry, marring, unmarried (married early > late)• blush, blushing, blushed• flattered, flattering (flatter early > late)• irritate, irritating, irritated, irritation• glance, glancing, glanced (glances early > late)
Waxing Families of Adjectives
• clear, clearer, clearest, cleared, clearness, clearly
• sharp, sharpness, sharply (sharpened late > early)
• odd, odder, oddest, oddly, oddity
• vivid, vividly, vividness
• awful, awfully (awfulness late only)
• straight, straightness (straightest late only; straighter, straightway late > early)
Waxing and Waning –ly AdverbsWaxing adverbs:
markedly, sociably, originally, pleasantly, nobly, comparatively, practically, perceptibly, ruefully, gaily, conspicuously, lucidly, good-humouredly, visibly, inevitably, luckily, previously, fearfully, supremely, oddly, perversely, cheerfully, helplessly, fully, positively, extraordinarily, mostly, publicly, repeatedly, precisely, thoughtfully, merely, awfully
Waning adverbs:
sternly, scantily, chiefly, intently, angrily, severely, tightly, hardly, terribly, solemnly, softly, tolerably, greatly, rarely, attentively, badly, rapidly, seriously, mentally, occasionally, slowly, passionately, coldly, strongly, usually, singularly, differently, generally, certainly, abruptly, constantly, gracefully, delightfully
Peculiar –ly Adverbs (Mainly Late)(4) sighingly, (2) appointedly, assentingly, diviningly, protectedly, reasoningly, redeemingly, rejoicingly, savingly, (1) advertisedly, affirmingly, applausively, avoidingly, booklessly, coolingly, creepingly, detectedly, inattackably, interruptingly, neededly, obstructedly, peeringly, persuadedly, protectingly, recordedly, relievingly, revivingly, simplifyingly, smokingly, spreadingly, sustainingly, swingingly, unencouragingly, unlightedly, wailingly, wavingly
Peculiar –ly Adverbs in Context
The fine old presence on the pillow had faltered before expression; then it appeared rather sighingly and finally to give the question up.
The Ivory Tower (1917)
Peculiar –ly Adverbs in Context
“She might have been anything she liked--except his wife.”
“But she wasn't,” said the Colonel very smokingly.
The Golden Bowl (1904)
Fanny herself limited indeed, she minimised, her office; you didn't need a jailor, she contended, for a domesticated lamb tied up with pink ribbon. This wasn't an animal to be controlled--it was an animal to be, at the most, educated. . . . This left, goodness knew, plenty of different calls for Maggie to meet--in a case in which so much pink ribbon, as it might be symbolically named, was lavished on the creature. What it all amounted to at any rate was that Mrs. Assingham would be keeping him quiet now, while his wife and his father-in-law carried out their own little frugal picnic; quite moreover, doubtless, not much less neededly in respect to the members of the circle that were with them there than in respect to the pair they were missing almost for the first time. The Golden Bowl (1904)