New York Edition Essays

  • Emily Dickinson's Faith and Daisy Miller by Henry James

    1153 Words  | 3 Pages

    American writers and poets of the 19th century created literature to criticize and detail the imperfections of society. Emily Dickinson, who retired from contact with the outside world by the age of twenty-three in favor of a life of isolation, can arguably be considered such a poet. Her untitled poem "Faith" can be interpreted as criticism of the masculine-dominated society of her time and supports themes in Henry James's work Daisy Miller: A Study, which also criticizes societal expectations and

  • Daisy Miller: A Study, by Henry James

    961 Words  | 2 Pages

    The controversial short story Daisy Miller: A Study, written by Henry James, depicts a story of a young European man named Winterbourne trying to come to terms with what he thinks about an American girl, named Daisy Miller. Henry James was born in New York in 1843, but lived most his life in Europe. While he was living in Europe he had many encounters with American tourists. After these encounters Henry decided he wanted to explore the difference between the innocent American, and the sophisticated

  • The Quintessential American Woman

    893 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Quintessential American Woman The American woman is a mystery that has yet to be solved. She is an ever-changing poem that sparks interest in those who are unaccustomed to her mysterious ways. The American women fascinated many authors, including Henry James. To express his enthrallment, James employed his literary talent to create Daisy Miller. Daisy exudes the vast depth of the entity of the American woman, which originally captured James’ attention. John Hay, a contemporary observer of

  • Analysing the Female Characters in Henry James' Fiction

    3999 Words  | 8 Pages

    Boston. USA. Dickens, Charles. (1990). Great Expectations. Penguin. London. U.K. Habegger, Alfred. (1989). Henry James and the “Woman Business”. Cambridge University Press. Howells, W, D. (1958). Henry James and His novels. Gibson. New York James, Henry. (1985). Daisy Miller and Other Short Stories. OUP. U.K. James, Henry. (1994). The American. Everyman. U.K. James, Henry. (1989). The Portrait of a Lady. OUP. U.K. Jefferson, D,W. (1960). Henry James: Writers

  • Daisy Miller A Convincing Female Protagonist In H. James' Short Story

    518 Words  | 2 Pages

    In Daisy Miller, Henry James is presenting us the nature of Daisy’s character through her relations with other characters, especially Winterbourne, one of the mail characters. Daisy Miller is a wealthy, young, American girl from New York, traveling around Europe with her mother and younger brother. Daisy is spirited, independent, and well meaning, but she is also, ignorant, and provincial, almost laughably so. She offers the opinion that Europe is “perfectly sweet,” talks about the tiring details

  • The Innocence of Daisy Miller

    1013 Words  | 3 Pages

    In 1878, Henry James wrote, Daisy Miller, a novella about a young American girl and her travels in Europe. Daisy Miller is a complex short story with many underlying themes such as appearance versus reality, knowledge versus innocence, outward action versus inward meditation, and Nature versus urbanity. In this short story, one is left to judge whether Daisy Miller, the main character of the story, is “a pretty American flirt” or a misunderstood, modern young woman. By probing into the complexities

  • Daisy Miller: Post-Civil War

    1761 Words  | 4 Pages

    Daisy Miller and her family are what people would consider a nouveau rich, also known as new money. This was very common in America at the time, this was due to businessmen 'making it big' after the Civil War. This was symbolic of America because America was basically the national equivalent of nouveau rich during this time. America was much like the American dream itself. A brand new start full of new and amazing opportunities. During the story this is displayed multiple times, such as when

  • Portrait of a Lady - From Novel to Film

    2276 Words  | 5 Pages

    with Ada's decision to be reborn with Baines a step hardly worthy of the serious feminist issues that Campion seems to be raising in the film (Hoeveler 114). Finally, she points out that Campion is heavily indebted to a 1920s work, The Story of a New Zealand River by Jane Mander. Partly as a consequence of not acknowledging this debt, the film has conflicting sources, Campion's rather permissive twentieth century script about adultery, superimposed on Mander's original, in which the Victorian heroine

  • The Character of Daisy in Henry James' Daisy Miller

    2185 Words  | 5 Pages

    Miller:  A Study.  The Heath Anthology of American Literature.  3rd ed. Vol. 2 Eds. Paul Lauter and Richard Yarborough.   Boston:  Houghton Mifflin Company, 1998.   452-92. 2 vols. Pollak, Vivian R., ed.  New Essays on Daisy Miller and The Turn of the Screw.  The American Novel Series.  New York:   Cambridge University Press, 1993. Reeve, N. H., ed.  Henry James:  The Shorter Fiction.   Houndsmills, England:  MacMillan Press Ltd., 1997. Scheiber, Andrew J.  "Embedded Narrations of Science and

  • Abstract Expressionism

    1102 Words  | 3 Pages

    argue that the painting and sculpture that emerged from the so-called New York School in the mid 1940s was the foremost artistic phenomenon of its time and was labeled as the Abstract Expressionist movement. Abstract expressionism was a reaction to social realism, surrealism, and primitive art in the 1940s; this is a turning point in American art history because it caused the rest of the art world to recognize New York as the new center of innovation. The movement synthesized three other previous

  • Shirley Jackson

    1432 Words  | 3 Pages

    the Wall” (1948) was set in the same suburb she spent her early years; Burlingame, San Francisco, California. In 1934 her family moved to Rochester, New York. She dropped out of the University of Rochester and three years later, Jackson enrolled into Syracuse, University where she met husband Stanley Edgar Hyman. As an editorial assistant for The New Republic he helped her publish “My Life with R.H Macy” (1941) as her first nationally published story. Jackson is most famous for writing “The Lottery”

  • Bette Howland's Criticism of Henry James's Washington Square

    523 Words  | 2 Pages

    how they all have the same basic plot. According to Bette Howland, Henry James never cared for his novel Washington Square. He refers to it as "A poorish thing" and "a tale purely American" (1). In fact, when he compiled his stories in his New York Edition he omitted this story from its pages. He claimed that, "I've tried to read over Washington Square and I can't and I fear it must go" (1). Ms. Howland claims that it is "a fitting irony. You might say that like Dr. Sloper in the novel, James disinherited

  • Service Employees Pension Fund Case Study

    1624 Words  | 4 Pages

    Service Employees Pension Fund Case Study I chose to write this paper on the organization that I am employed with, the Service Employees Pension Fund of Upstate New York (SEPF/fund). I focused my paper on the main office which is located in Syracuse, NY. I am employed at the Albany location. This gave me the opportunity to look at the office as an outsider seeing as I only make a trip to Syracuse a couple times a year. Interviewing with the fund manager also helped me to get an idea of how

  • Presidential Theory

    2175 Words  | 5 Pages

    public expectations have always and will continue to shape the fundamental managerial role of President of The United States. The blueprint of the Office of The Presidency can be traced back to1777, when the state of New York passed their Constitution. The Constitution of the state of New York gave only the “Governor” ultimate executive power, stressed the importance of a strong chief executive, granted reprieves and pardons, as well as the establishment of the State of the Union address. The Final aspect

  • Individuality And Free Verse in Walt Whitman's Song of Myself

    1521 Words  | 4 Pages

    in an attempt to uncover the individual's humanity. Born near Huntington, New York, Whitman was the second of a family of nine children. His father was a carpenter. The poet had a particularly close relationship with his mother. When Whitman was four years old, his family moved to Brooklyn, New York, where he attended public school for six years before being apprenticed to a printer. Two years later he went to New York City to work in printing shops. He returned to Long Island in 1835 and taught

  • Gibbons v Ogden Decision Fair or Unfair

    1169 Words  | 3 Pages

    economics and business, may have never been a possibility without decisions such as this. Monopolies did not allow for equal division of business and therefore was unjust. If all men are created equal they should be given equal opportunities. The New York Livingston-Fulton monopoly clearly subjected any potential competition to harsh conditions that would make it impossible for them to keep up in their business. Travel by steamboat was much faster than any other means in the time of this case

  • Women's History

    2533 Words  | 6 Pages

    Women's History Amelia Bloomer:Amelia Bloomer was born in Cortland County, New York, in 1818. She received an education in schools of the State and became a teacher in public schools, then as a private tutor. She married in 1840 to Dexter C. Bloomer, of Seneca Falls, New York. Dexter C. Bloomer was editor of a county newspaper, and Mrs. Bloomer began to write for the paper. She was one of the editors of the Water Bucket, a temperance paper published during Washingtonian revival. Mr. Bloomer lived

  • The Editing of Hemingway's The Garden of Eden

    719 Words  | 2 Pages

    Jenks, “Publishing more Hemingway seemed less interesting than publishing new writers, which is what I came to Scribner's to do” (http://narrativemagazine.org/html/eden.htm). Ultimately Jenks did take on the impossible task of editing Hemingway. One would expect a Hemingway expert to do the editing of The Garden of Eden, however for Jenks, editing Hemingway was an entirely new experience. Eric Pooley, a writer for New York Magazine, states, “[Jenks] hadn't read a Hemingway novel in years. He didn't

  • Internet Addicts in Danger

    1101 Words  | 3 Pages

    Internet Addicts in Danger Internet chat rooms have become a devastating disadvantage to the social interaction and growth of people in the world. More and more of the world’s youth are becoming addicted to Internet chat rooms. Not only are Internet chat room relationships leading to impersonal contact of people hiding flaws behind anonymity, they are leading to the abduction of many underage individuals. In an article published in The Age, a magazine in Melbourne, Australia, Doctor Mubarak

  • Catcher In The Rye

    1349 Words  | 3 Pages

    Catcher in the Rye is, in fact, a perceptive study of one individual’s understanding of his human condition. Holden Caulfield, a teenager growing up in 1950’s, New York, has been expelled from school for poor achievement once again. In an attempt to deal with this he leaves school a few days prior to the end of term, and goes to New York to take a vacation before returning to his parents’ inevitable irritation. Told as a monologue, the book describe Holden’s thoughts and activities over these few