ABSTRACT

Henry James and the Media Arts of Modernity: Commercial Cosmopolitanism turns to the author’s late fiction, letters, and essays to investigate his contribution to the development of an American cosmopolitan culture, both in popular and high art. The book contextualizes James’s writing within a broader cultural and social history to uncover relationships among increasingly sensory-focused media technologies, mass-consumer practices, and developments in literary style when they spread to Europe at the inception of the era of big business. Combining cultural studies with neoclassical Marxism and postcolonial theory, the study addresses a gap in scholarship concerning the rise of literary modernism as a cosmopolitan phenomenon. Although scholars have traditionally acknowledged the international character of artists’ participation in this movement, when analyzing the contributions of American expatriate writers in Europe, they generally assume an unequal degree of reciprocity in transatlantic cultural exchange with European artists being more influential than American ones. This book argues that James identifies a cultural form of American imperialism that emerged out of a commercialized version of cosmopolitanism. Yet the author appropriates the arts of modernity when he realizes that art generated with the mechanized principles of mass-production spurred a diverse range of aesthetic responses to other early-twentieth century technological and organizational innovations.

chapter |33 pages

Introduction

Henry James, Commercial Cosmopolitanism, and the Historical Formation of Mass Culture

chapter 3|37 pages

Writing Machines

The Question of Cosmopolitan Opportunities for Mass-Produced Short Fiction

chapter 4|30 pages

Getting the Picture

American Corporate Advertising and the Rise of a Cosmopolitan Visual Culture in The Ambassadors

chapter 5|31 pages

The Sacred in the Profane

“The Old Things” and Spiritual Realism in Summersoft and The Wings of the Dove

chapter 6|31 pages

That “Rare Power of Purchase”

The Material Advantage of Acquiring Cosmopolitan Skills in The Golden Bowl

chapter |9 pages

Epilogue

Art Consumption in James’s Last Writings