scholarly journals Henry James across Borders

Viatica ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas CONSTANTINESCO

This essay explores the opposition between the figures of the cosmopolitan and the patriot in a selection of James’s letters and travel writings. It focuses on the crossing of borders as revelatory of the mutual haunting of the “native” and the “alien.” But crossing the frontier also entails encountering the representatives of State violence. Through James’s mise en scène of his ambivalent fascination for the martial figure of the soldier, the frontier becomes a critical locus for the queering of identities and affiliations.

1994 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 91-95
Author(s):  
Craig Howard White
Keyword(s):  

1995 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 51-64 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wolfgang S. Heinz

The article looks at the motives of military governments in Argentina, Chile and Uruguay to introduce ‘disappearances’ as a new method to fight ‘subversion’ and thereby commit human rights violations. Five variables are taken as a point of departure, the country's previous experience with use of state violence, the selection of victims, the role of international public opinion, the selection of methods within the state and ideological factors. Among the key elements were in two countries the shift of responsibility for the use of violence to the military before the coup (except Chile), a lack of civilian control and influence in the formulation and control of internal security policies and an overwhelming, confused ideological definition in Argentina and in Chile (to a lesser degree in Uruguay) of the armed conflict as a war between good and evil and against World Communism which endangered the survival of the nation.


Linguaculture ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 63-76
Author(s):  
Simona Catrinel Avarvarei

As tattoos are both drawing and text that imprint the epidermis in inky arabesques of Delphic symbolism, Punch or The London Charivari acted, for more than one-hundred and sixty-one years (1841-2002) as the sharply witty, bitterly satirical chronicle of its own time. With a weekly circulation of approximately 50,000 – 60,000 issues in the mid-Victorian period, Punch became one of the most influential journalistic witnesses in mid-Victorian Britain, renowned for its unique sense of humour, audacious approach to current social and political matters and, most of all, for an unprecedented mastery of caustic illustrations, in a fresh approach to capture and caricaturise the spirit of the epoch, equally unprecedented in its dynamism and expansion. Although throughout the 1840s the magazine built its popularity more on political analysis than on satirical drawing, ”Punch's Pencillings” would turn the magazine into a vivid fresco, whose inimitable touch and magnetism have come to be osmotically associated with John Leech (1817-1864). With his undeniably remarkable artistic touch he managed not only to define the overall architecture of the magazine, but also to create a new understanding of humorous drawings, introducing the world to the concept of 'cartoon' as we all know it today. This article examines a selection of his three-thousand drawings published in Punch, in an attempt to recompose, through curved charcoal lines, the jigsaw of what Henry James coined as “newspaperized world,” at times when, as Lucy Brown argues, Britain was forging the modern concept of news. It is not only the social, cultural and political milieu that interests us, but also the extratextual implications of a visual appearance and narrative that pervaded the literary scene, as nineteenth-century journalism shared its boundaries with the realm of literary fiction.


2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 89-97
Author(s):  
Nur Annisa Savini ◽  
Surya Farid Sathotho ◽  
Philipus Nugroho Hari Wibowo

Nyai  (2016)  merupakan  sebuah  film  karya  Garin  Nugroho  yang  dibuat hanya  dengan  menggunakan  satu  kamera  dan  pengambilan  gambarnya  secara terus menerus tanpa henti (one take) untuk satu film secara penuh. Konsekuensi dari teknik tersebut menyebabkan Film Nyai tak ubahya seperti pementasan teater di atas panggung. Karya ini terinspirasi oleh beberapa karya sastra sekaligus.Untuk melakukan analisis terhadap Film Nyai, menggunakan konsep yang dikenal awal mulanya sebagai sebuah konsep pemanggungan di atas panggung  teater  dan  pada perkembangan  selanjutnya dikenal juga dalam dunia  sinematografi.  Pemahaman  mengenai  mise en scène  ini  sangat  penting untuk  pijakan  melakukan  analisis  terhadap  unsur-unsur  yang  ada  dalam  Film Nyai.Nyai merupakan film dengan idiom pertunjukan teater yang sangat kental. Blocking, Setting, Make Up benar-benar seperti pertunjukan teater di atas panggung. Sedangkan pergerakan, sudut pengambilan dan pemilihan lensa kamera dibuat semirip mungkin dengan pandangan manusia. Kata Kunci: mise en scène, film nyai, garin nugroho   Nyai (2016) is a film by Garin Nugroho which is made using only one camera and with long take technique for full film. As a consequence of this technique, Nyai is very as theater performance ona stage. This work is inspired by several literary works at once.To conduct an analysis of the Nyai, it uses a concept that was known in the beginning as a staging concept on the theater stage and later known in the world of cinematography. This understanding of mise en scène is very important for the basis of analyzing the elements in Nyai.Nyai is a film with a very strong theatrical idiom. Blocking, Setting, Make Up are really like theatre performances. Meanwhile, the movement, angle and selection of the camera lens are made as close as possible to human sight.Key words: mise en scène, nyai, garin nugroho  


Author(s):  
David Francis Urrows

This chapter examines the history of the pipe organ in late imperial China. Using a selection of official accounts, travel writings, and literary texts from the 17 and 18th centuries, the author argues that Chinese understandings of this fantastic Western object did not take any simple form of exoticism or indifference, but rather a mixture of diverse transcultural experiences shifting between intellectual openness and ideological resistance. The intersection of religion, music, and science brought to light a typical Chinese cultural centricity encountering the otherness of Western high culture, from which a new mode of in-between existence emerged along the process of dynamic mutual perceptions and evaluations.


Author(s):  
Eleanor Bell

Reflecting on her experiences of the Cairngorms in The Living Mountain (written 1940s, published 1977), Nan Shepherd writes, 'Here then may be lived a life … so untouched by any mode of apprehension but their own, that the body may be said to think. Each sense heightened to its most exquisite awareness, is in itself total experience.' For Shepherd, the ‘total experience’ offered by the mountains opened up deeper channels of the self. This chapter reflects on certain aspects of the gendered nature of the genre. In doing so, it will make specific parallels between the work of Shepherd and Kathleen Jamie, both travel writers and Scottish poets, whose texts although produced over half a century apart, are united in their questioning of their natural entitlement to place. Yet Jamie has also been very realistic about the genre, critical of its inherent masculine bias. For Jamie, the spiritual aspects of travel writing have to be continually renegotiated, their cultural, social and political dimensions taken into account. In comparing Shepherd’s The Living Mountain and a selection of Jamie’s travel writings, this chapter examines the social and cultural context of each writer’s spiritual and feminist quest, illuminating, in turn, their own particular ‘findings’.


Author(s):  
Michael Allis

This chapter discusses the ways in which music has been represented, referenced, and discussed in nineteenth-century travel literature. In the context of the expanding opportunities for travel in the nineteenth century, a plethora of travel-related literature was created—guidebooks (Murray, Baedeker), poetry, novels, and descriptions of travel by writers such as Goethe, Heine, Dickens, Stendhal, Henry James, and Mary Shelley. Focusing on the latter category (writings descriptive of travel) from c.1800 to 1914, the chapter begins by establishing the significance of these texts in terms of documenting performing practice, referencing composers and performers, and commenting upon the status and power of music, including its ability to intoxicate or evoke nostalgia. Tensions in the portrayal of musical “otherness” are identified, along with the sense of competing levels of musicality between nations, communicated by a range of literary strategies that include binary opposition, hyperbole, and scenic absorption. The invocation of musical metaphor or parallel is highlighted as an important feature of writing style in these narratives, and the significance of a particular group of travel writings by musicians such as Edward Holmes, Marquis Chisholm, Hector Berlioz, Jacques Offenbach and Granville Bantock is also established. Composers’ engagement with literary models of travel narrative offers clear parallels in the nature and sequence of events in several musical works, creating real potential for new readings of specific compositions.


2019 ◽  
Vol 64 ◽  
pp. 03003
Author(s):  
Gregory Brais Sioui

As part of an aesthetic approach, this design-driven research crosses two methodologies to determine what is common in the perception of atmospheres. First, a case study of the Vals’ thermal baths led to the selection of five different atmospheres, which were then analyzed through Gaston Bachelard’s lens, using his book L’Eau et les rêves. Bachelard’s literary symbols echo in the water contained in the massive stone walls of Vals to identify common generators of sensitive atmospheres. Secondly, the construction of this dialogue between Bachelard and Zumthor leads to the elaboration of a conceptual architecture project which is voluntarily emotional. This project introduces the elements that generate five ambiences identified in the case study. This design-driven research is therefore based on Grégoire Chelkoff’s theory of formants as vectors of transmission of atmosphere, pre-existing to the experienc of a place, of an ambiance, which itself is understood as a sensitive result of the perception of the space. The present work therefore questions the role of water as a sensitive vector, from the architecture to its visitor. The goal is to determine how water, in varying manifestations, can be used by architects to create a “mise en scène” for a voluntarily emotional architecture.


2016 ◽  
Vol 4 (8) ◽  
pp. 191
Author(s):  
Maria do Carmo Lanna Figueiredo

Resumo: Estas obras de Machado de Assis e Henry James podem ser lidas como estórias sobre o narrador. A análise compara-os a partir desta consideração, estabelecendo como os dois autores, conhecidos como mestres do realismo psicológico, tentaram acrescentar alguma complexidade à sua obra discutindo temas já apresentados na literatura universal, ao enriquecer as normas da narrativa em 1a pessoa. Há também um propósito de estabelecer até que ponto a escolha do ponto de vista torna as obras particularmente interessantes e de efeito, pela análise da ação, personagens e estória.Abstract: These works of Machado de Assis and Henry James can be read as stories about the narrator. The analysis has compared them from this consideration, in order to establish how the two authors, known as masters of the psychological realism, have tried to add some complexity in their artcraft on discussing themes already presented in universal literature, by means of enriching the patterns of the narrative in the first person. There is also a purpose of pointing out to what extent the selection of point of view makes the works particularly interesting and effective, analyzing action, characters and story in support of that idea.


2021 ◽  
pp. 233264922110156
Author(s):  
Michelle S. Phelps ◽  
Amber M. Hamilton

The explosion of Black Lives Matter protests in the mid-2010s rendered visible state violence against Black Americans, producing a barrage of images and videos of lethal police violence and the protests that followed. These images served as a powerful site of contestation about the meaning of race and racism in the United States for both movement supporters and critics. We examine these dynamics through the lens of media coverage of the pivotal 2014 killing of Michael Brown by police officer Darren Wilson and the protests that followed in Ferguson, MO. Drawing from literatures on race, visuality, and media studies, we explore how media outlets pictured the killing of Michael Brown and the protests in Ferguson, either resisting or reproducing the white racial frame through the selection of images in their coverage. We analyze the images in digital media coverage across nine ideologically diverse media outlets in the month after Brown’s death and the month following the non-indictment of Officer Wilson. Across 1,303 articles, we show that most sites did not center images of violence against Brown, preferring instead images of Brown’s life and, more commonly, protesters and law enforcement. While we found few consistent differences in image categories preferred across outlets’ ideological profiles, the specific content and tone of these images starkly diverged, with liberal sites choosing humanizing images of Brown and protesters and conservative sites favoring criminalizing images. We conclude by considering the role media images play in mediating perceptions of race and racism.


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