The Education of the People in James’s The Bostonians and The Princess Casamassima

E. Coit
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Abstract

Chapter 2 reads Henry James's The Bostonians and The Princess Casamassima in the context of their serialization in magazines later called 'genteel', showing how these novels question the practice of cultivation that those magazines facilitate and prize. Identifying that practice as a core ideal in the liberalism expressed by Bostonians like Charles Eliot Norton, the chapter shows how James questions the capacity of the broader public for such cultivation. Especially in his evocation of Reconstruction-era efforts to educate freedmen, James points to the hypocrisy and the accidental tyrannizing of liberal educators like Norton; but his novels distinguish between that accidental tyranny and the deliberate tyranny of those who would simply master and rule rather than educate. Associating such projects of mastery with Thomas Carlyle's pessimism, which he juxtaposes against an Emersonian optimism about democracy, James ambivalently endorses Carlyle's sense that 'the people' have meagre capacities, but also links the denial of education to violence. Drawing from Walter Pater, James portrays cultivations that feed on the pleasures of food and art in New York and the Continent, and suggests that this kind of cultivation fosters development much more successfully than the ascetic moralizing of democratic revolutionaries and Bostonians.
詹姆斯的《波士顿人》和《卡萨马西玛公主》中的人民教育
第二章读亨利·詹姆斯的《波士顿人》和《卡萨马西玛公主》这两本小说在后来被称为《绅士》的杂志连载的背景下,展示了这些小说是如何质疑这些杂志所推崇和推崇的修炼实践的。在查尔斯·艾略特·诺顿(Charles Eliot Norton)等波士顿人所表达的自由主义的核心理想中,这一章表明了詹姆斯对更广泛的公众培养这种能力的质疑。特别是在他唤起重建时期教育自由民的努力时,詹姆斯指出了像诺顿这样的自由教育家的虚伪和偶然的专制;但是他的小说区分了偶然的暴政和那些只会控制和统治而不是教育的人的蓄意暴政。詹姆斯将这种掌握的计划与托马斯·卡莱尔的悲观主义联系在一起,并将其与爱默生对民主的乐观主义相提并论,他矛盾地赞同卡莱尔的观点,即“人民”的能力微薄,但也将拒绝教育与暴力联系在一起。借鉴沃尔特·佩特的观点,詹姆斯描绘了纽约和欧洲大陆以食物和艺术的乐趣为食的修养,并指出这种修养比民主革命者和波士顿人的苦行僧式道德说教更能促进发展。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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