"An altogether worthwhile, serious, and original approach to the
Jameses."--Choice
"An erudite and engaging book....[A] remarkable achievement.
Posnock...reminds us that our conceptual experience of modernity
owes as much to Henry James as to his brother."--Journal of
American History
"A brilliant study--a remarkable synthesis of cultural history,
close reading, and theoretical speculation. It will make an
important contribution to James studies, and an equally significant
contribution to our understanding of American culture, to debates
on modernity, and to discussions of the possibilities and problems
of cultural criticism itself."--Jonathan Freedman, Yale
University
"This is a major work of criticism, a...brilliant reconfiguration
of literary culture and of literary modernism at the turn into the
20th century, and it offers some of the best interpretations I have
ever read of Henry and William James, and of many attendant figures
like Howard Sturgis, Santayana, and Adorno."--Richard Poirier,
Rutgers University
"Posnock manages to provide an intellectual as well as an
ideological context for the challenge of modernity. The result is a
rich mosaic of quotations and commentary, inlaid with diverse
elements from psychology, fiction, philosophy, literary history,
autobiography, and cultural theory."--American Literature
"An altogether worthwhile, serious, and original approach to the
Jameses."--Choice
"An erudite and engaging book....[A] remarkable achievement.
Posnock...reminds us that our conceptual experience of modernity
owes as much to Henry James as to his brother."--Journal of
American History
"A brilliant study--a remarkable synthesis of cultural history,
close reading, and theoretical speculation. It will make an
important contribution to James studies, and an equally significant
contribution to our understanding of American culture, to debates
on modernity, and to discussions of the possibilities and problems
of cultural criticism itself."--Jonathan Freedman, Yale
University
"This is a major work of criticism, a...brilliant reconfiguration
of literary culture and of literary modernism at the turn into the
20th century, and it offers some of the best interpretations I have
ever read of Henry and William James, and of many attendant figures
like Howard Sturgis, Santayana, and Adorno."--Richard Poirier,
Rutgers University
"Posnock manages to provide an intellectual as well as an
ideological context for the challenge of modernity. The result is a
rich mosaic of quotations and commentary, inlaid with diverse
elements from psychology, fiction, philosophy, literary history,
autobiography, and cultural theory."--American Literature
"...An erudite and engaging book...Remarkable achievement...Reminds
us that our conceptual experiences of modernity owes as much to
Henry James as to his brother."--The Journal of American History
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