LITR 5733: Seminar in American Culture-Henry James: Family & Film

Fall 1997-98  University of Houston-Clear Lake

Instructor: Craig White      W 1900-2150

Office: 1529-4 Bayou    E-mail: WHITEC@uhcl.edu

Phones:(281)283-3380; home(281)486-0977.Office Hrs: T 2-4, R 1-3

Caveat: Data stated and contracts implied in this syllabus may change with minimal notice with fair hearings at class meetings.

Texts

Henry James, Daisy Miller (1878), in The Turn of the Screw and Other Short Fiction (Signet-NAL, 1962)

Henry James, Washington Square (1881; NY: Penguin Classics, 1986)

Henry James, The Portrait of a Lady (1881; Oxford UP, 1995)

Henry James, The Bostonians (1884; Oxford UP, 1984)

Henry James, The Turn of the Screw (1898), in The Turn of the Screw and Other Short Fiction (Signet-NAL, 1962)

 

Henry James, The Wings of the Dove (1902; New York: Norton Critical, 1978)

Henry James, "The Jolly Corner" (1907) (copy)

Henry James, from The American Scene, A Small Boy and Others, Italian Hours, and Portraits of Places (copies)

 

Alice James, The Death and Letters of Alice James (1981; Exact Change, 1997)

Alice James, The Diary of Alice James (1964) (copy)

Virginia Woolf, from A Room of One's Own (1929) (copy)

Henry James, Sr. Autobiography (copy)

William James, from The Principles of Psychology (1890) (copy)

William James, from Varieties of Religious Experience (1902) (copy)

R. W. B. Lewis, The Jameses: A Family Narrative (Farrar, Straus, & Giroux, 1991; on reserve in Neumann Library)

Films: Bogdanovich, Daisy Miller (1974); Wyler, The Heiress (1949, based on Washington Square); Clayton, The Innocents (1961, based on Turn of the Screw); Merchant-Ivory, The Bostonians (1984); Campion, The Portrait of a Lady (1996)

Objectives:

1. To read and discuss classic American fiction by Henry James in relation to his life, to writings by his family, and to films based on his fiction.

 

2. To study the Jameses as one of the USA's great literary families, and to survey other literary families such as the Beechers, the Adamses, and the Lowells, among others.

 

3. To compare Henry James's printed fiction with its film adaptations, and to evaluate the aesthetics of film in relation to print literature.

 

4. To trace the development of Henry James's literary style from "Realism" to "Modernism."

 

5. To practice standard and alternative scholarly genres such as the book review, the encyclopedia article, criticism of film adaptation, and the essay.

 

Written Assignments and Graded Work:

2 of the following 3 pre-final assignments--due 24 Sept., 29 Oct.

*book review with class presentation--4-5 pages

*encyclopedia-style report on a literary family with class presentation--3 pages

*critical comparison of a print novel with a film adaptation, either concerning a novel by Henry James or another author, with class presentation--5-7 pages

Final Assignment (due 3 December)

*12-page paper on a subject of your choice, which may incorporate one of the earlier assignments

            You will have 2 due dates before the final paper is due at the final exam period.  You may hand in any of the written assignments on any of the first three due dates.  That is, the order of the first three assignments is up to you.  Presentation dates will be assigned.

 

Descriptions of written assignments--Choose Two

*book review with class presentation--4-5 pages

            A standard practice for professional scholars is reviewing academic texts.  This assignment gives you experience in this practice.  Based at least partly on the requests made following the first class, each of you has been assigned a book to use if you exercise the book-review written assignment option.  For those of you who are scheduled to make a presentation on your book, you will have to read your book whether you choose this written option or not.  For those of you who neither have a book review presentation scheduled nor want to exercise the book review written option, reading your book is optional.

            For models of the kind of scholarly book review you will be writing, it is recommended that you look at some book reviews in scholarly journals such as American Literature or Modern Language Quarterly or The Henry James Review (now on the WWWeb).  On an assigned date you will distribute copies of your review to the class and read it aloud.  Discussion of both content and style will follow--that is, students and instructor may ask questions or comment regarding the book you reviewed, or they may ask questions or comment regarding the review's composition.  The reviewer may make corrections or additions before submitting the review to the instructor on one of the due dates.

*encyclopedia-style report on a literary family with class presentation

            Another standard practice for professional scholars is to write encyclopedia articles for reference works.  For this assignment, you are to imagine that you are writing an entry for a reference book titled The Encyclopedia of Literary Families.  For models, you might look at standard literary reference works like The Oxford Companion to American Literature or other such works in the PS section of the reference shelves.  On an assigned date you will distribute copies of your article to the class and read it aloud.  Discussion of both content and style will follow.  You may make corrections or additions before submitting the review to the instructor on one of the due dates.

 

*critical comparison of a print novel with a film adaptation, either concerning a novel by Henry James or another author, with class presentation--5-7 pages

            Read a book, then watch a film adapted from it.  Write about what has and hasn't changed in the process of adaptation.  How do the book and film exhibit the different powers or values of print and film media?  If you feel postmodern, you could watch the movie before you read the book and compare this pattern to the standard "read first, then watch."  Or you could even watch an original movie, then read its "novelization."

            However, I prefer you do this exercise with a text by James and the film based on it.  It's all right if a few of you do the same text and film.  You might rent Portrait of a Lady, The Bostonians, or Daisy Miller, or I could loan you my copy of The Heiress (Washington Square) or The Innocents (The Turn of the Screw).

            You will not make a class presentation on this assignment, though you may have a class assignment concerning criticism of the James films.

            One James text and film you might enjoy that this class is not covering is The Europeans, a Jane Austen-like comic novel (1878) and the Merchant-Ivory film adaptation, The Europeans (1979).

 

Final Assignment

*12-page paper on a subject of your choice, which may incorporate one of the earlier assignments--due 3 December.

            You are free to choose your own topic for your final paper, as long as it has some relation to the course--that is, as long as it's about the writings or lives of Henry James or his family or of another literary family, or concerns film adaptations of literature, or a combination of these categories.

            You may expand, extend, or modify one of your earlier papers for your final paper.

            Though the topic for this paper is ultimately your own choice, feel free to consult with me about your choice or its development.

 

Oral Presentation Assignments

            Each student will make 3 class presentations.  Some of these will be based on the written assignments above, and other presentation assignments are described below.

            If you are making a presentation on a subject that will become one of your written assignments, you may bring in copies of your draft and read it with the class for the sake of receiving suggestions.  However, if the draft is not ready, a page of notes copied for the entire class is required.

            In any case, in all presentations you should give students a page of notes featuring bibliographic information and information.  The purpose of this is to give your fellow students something to look at in order to help them maintain attention during your presentation.

 

Film Criticism Review

            For one of the films we will be watching in class, a student will look up a review of the film at the time of its appearance and report on the review's general verdict and especially its insights in relation to the novel by James.  These assignments will be made randomly by the instructor.  In some cases students may be assigned to review articles about film adaptation instead of film reviews.

            To find a review for the film in question, you might always start by asking the reference librarian for help.  She or he will probably send you to the Reader's Guide to Periodical Literature or the New York Times Index, though you might also try the MLA CD-ROM.  You may make copies of the review for the class if you like, but copies are not necessary.  Even if you make copies, summarize the article and show the class some highlights.

 

Film criticism and theory reports

            Some students will be given articles from scholarly journals regarding film theory or criticism, especially in relation to book adaptations.  For your report, review the overall point and content of the article(s), some of the major points of interest in the article, and summarize what you learned.

 

Readings from R. W. B. Lewis's The Jameses

            One of the major contributions to research on the James family in the past decade has been R. W. B. Lewis's The Jameses: A Family Narrative (New York: Farrar, Strauss, & Giroux, 1991).  This book will be placed on 7-day reserve at the circulation desk in Neumann Library.  For a number of class meetings, students will be assigned to read two chapters and report on them to the class.  It is recommended that, for your report, you print out a page of notes indicating the factual highlights of the chapter you read.

 

 

       

Optional Exercise: James Family Newsgroup

            Early in August I subscribed to the James Family Newsgroup but have not yet offered any postings to it and don't know my way around the use of newsgroups yet, so here I only give you the information for subscribing if you like.

            This information regarding the James Family Newsgroup came from "the Henry James scholar's Guide to Web Sites" (http://www.newpaltz.edu/~hathaway/#Jamesf-l):

            *Postings devoted to the James family.  To subscribe, send an e-mail to listserv@wvnvm.wvnet.edu with the message SUBSCRIBE JAMESF-L YOURNAME (your full name replaces "YOURNAME").  You will immediately receive full instructions about accessing the archive and posting your own messages.

 

Possible Group Film Outing

            According to someone on the James Family Newsgroup, the film of The Wings of the Dove will premiere in New York on 7 November 1997, but I have no information about when the film will arrive in Houston.  If it arrives in time, we may use one of our Wednesday nights to see it as a group.  Since we have no final exam, under these circumstances we would make up the missed class meeting during the final exam period.

            Please offer any further information you may have about the arrival of this film or of Washington Square.

 

COURSE POLICIES

Attendance:  You are expected to attend every scheduled class meeting.  Attendance is not taken systematically, but, if you miss more than one meeting, you start jeopardizing your status in the course.  If you keep missing, you should drop the course.

            If shockingly absent, return and make contact ([281] 283-3380) ASAP in normal office hours or leave message.  Catch up fast!  If you miss more than two classes (especially early!), consider dropping, unless prior arrangements are made.  More than one absence affects final grades.  You are always welcome to discuss your standing in the course.

 

Academic Honesty Policy: Please refer to the catalog for the Academic Honesty Policy.  Plagiarism, that is, using research without citations, will result in a grade penalty or failure of the course.  (1996-97 Catalog, pp. 69-75).  Copying someone else's test leads to heavy losses of credit for the test and the course in general.  Refer to the UHCL catalogue for further details regarding expectations and potential penalties.

 

Disabilities: If you have a disability and need a special accommodation, consult first with the Health Center and then discuss the accommodation with me.

 

Incompletes: A grade of "I" is given only in cases of documented emergency late in the semester.  An Incomplete Grade Contract must be completed.

 

Reading and Presentation Schedule:

 

Wednesday, 27 August: introduction of subject; syllabus; James family genealogy; assignments and copy distribution; begin watching Daisy Miller

 

Wednesday, 3 September: Daisy Miller + James's travel writings on Rome and Geneva and preface to Daisy Miller (handouts)

complete viewing Daisy Miller (Bogdanovich)

student report: Becky Nelson--review(s) of film of Daisy Miller

student report: Ken Hoffman--The Jameses, chapters 1, 2

student report: Charity Jones--2 articles on Daisy Miller

 

 

Wednesday, 10 September:

read: Washington Square

read: selection from A Small Boy and Others (copy)

student report: Norman Boyd, Beecher family

student report: Tina Cardona Billington, The Jameses, chaps. 3, 4

student report: Marsha Renals, film criticism of The Heiress

 

 

Wednesday, 17 September:

complete reading and viewing Washington Square

begin reading The Portrait of a Lady

student report: Linton Gilling, Dumas family

student report: The Jameses, chapters 5, 6--Gayle Shipp

book report: Cheryl Osnayo-Grife, The Comic Sense of Henry James

 

 

Wednesday, 24 September--Due Date #1--any of the three pre-final assignments may be submitted

The Portrait of a Lady

student report: The Jameses, chapters 7, 8--Norman Boyd

student report: Melinda Hawkins, Coleridge family

student report: Virginia Lively, "The concept of literacy in print and film"

student report: Christina Wilkinson, film review(s) of Campion's The Portrait of a Lady (1996)

student report: Will Deese, Adams family

 

 

Wednesday, 1 October:

read: The Portrait of a Lady (complete)

read: The Death and Letters of Alice James

student report: The Jameses, chapters 9, 10--Will Deese

book report: Becky Nelson, Alice James

student report: Kimberly Jones, Lowell family

student report: Sherri Bowling, Cooper family

 

 

Wednesday, 8 October:

The Diary of Alice James

student report: The Jameses, chapters 11, 12--Sherri Bowling

student report: Gayle Shipp, Howe and Ward families

student report: Kurt Bouillion, Harding Davis family

student report: Kimberly Jones, "Rediscovering Jane Eyre through its Adaptations"

 

 

Wednesday, 15 October:

read: The Bostonians

book report: Tina Cardona Billington, Henry James and the "Woman Business"

student report: The Jameses, chapters 13, 14--Kurt Bouillion

student report: Claudia Pratka, film review of The Bostonians

student report: Marsha Renals, Channing family

 

 

Wednesday, 22 October:

Meeting 9: The Bostonians

student report: Ken Hoffman, Mather family

student report: Melinda Hawkins, 2 articles on The Bostonians (1984)

student report: Virginia Lively, Willis family + "Fanny Fern"

book report: Marsha Renals, Edith Wharton

 

 

Wednesday, 29 October: Due Date #2--any of pre-final assignments may be submitted

read: The Turn of the Screw

read: Henry James Senior, Autobiography (copy)

read: selection from William James, The Varieties of Religious Experience

book report: Linton Gilling, The Father

student report: Cheryl Osnayo-Grife, film review of The Innocents (1961)

student report: Becky Nelson, Bronte family

student report: Tina Cardona Billington, Browning family

 

Wednesday, 5 November:

read: The Wings of the Dove

read: selections from William James, The Principles of Psychology

read: assigned supplements from Norton Critical Edition

student report: The Jameses, chapters 15, 16--Virginia Lively

book report: Claudia Pratka, William James: Public Philosopher

student report: Christina Wilkinson, Dreiser, Dresser family

book report: Kurt Bouillion, Henry James: The Young Master

 

 

Wednesday, 12 November:

read: The Wings of the Dove

read: selection from William James, The Varieties of Religious Experience

student report: The Jameses, chapters 17, 18--Linton Gilling

book report: Will Deese, Henry James and Pragmatic Thought

student report: Claudia Pratka, Warner family

student report: Gayle Shipp, "Fitzgerald and the Movies"

book report: Ken Hoffman, The Image of Europe in Henry James

 

 

Wednesday, 19 November:

read: The Wings of the Dove

book report: Sherri Bowling, Biography of Broken Fortunes

book report: Melinda Hawkins, Henry James: The Imagination of Genius

student report: Christina Wilkinson, "Squandered Possibilities: The Film Versions of Dreiser's Novels"

student report: Charity Jones, "Toward a Phenomenology of Cinematic and Electronic Presence"

 

 

Wednesday, 3 December:--final papers due

read: Chapters from The American Scene; Henry James, "The Jolly Corner"

student report: Cheryl Osnayo-Grife, Masters family

student report: Charity Jones: Faulkner family

student report: The Jameses, Appendix B--Kimberly Jones

student report: Norman Boyd, "Jack London and the Movies"

 

 

10 December

Final Exam period: There will be no final exam, but we will use the period somehow.  If the film of The Wings of the Dove comes out during the semester, we may use one of our other class periods to go see it as a group--in which case, we'll use the final exam period for our final class meeting.  Otherwise, I will hold office hours during the final exam period, and you may pick up your final papers and confer with me if you like.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

LITR 5733: Seminar in American Culture-Henry James: Family & Film

Fall 1997-98  University of Houston-Clear Lake

 

Student presentations by student names

 

Following are the dates of your presentations by name, with the categories, subjects, and dates following, along with information regarding availability of materials.  Most of this information is also on the course syllabus.

 

I shuffled the forms repeatedly so that I could divide the assignments as fairly (or at least as randomly) as possible.  If someone got stuck with a low choice or something they didn't even list, I tried to give them a good choice on something else.

 

Because there are more students than books listed on the book review form, a few people are reviewing the same book.  Their names are cross-listed.  Please try to cooperate.

 

Tina Cardona Billington

book: Habegger, Henry James and the "Woman Business" (15 Oct.) (book is in Neumann library holdings--assignment is cross-listed with Kimberly Jones)

family: Browning (9 October)

report: The Jameses, chs. 3, 4 (10 September)

 

 

Kurt Bouillion

family: Harding Davis (8 October)

book: Novick, Henry James: The Young Master (5 Nov.) (book is on order at Neumann library; if not arrived, try inter-library loan)

report: The Jameses, chapters 13, 14 (15 Oct.)

 

 

Sherri Bowling

family: Cooper (1 Oct.)

book: Jane Maher, Biography of Broken Fortunes (19 Nov.) (acquire book through inter-library loan)

report: The Jameses, chapters 11, 12 (8 Oct.)

 

 

Norman Boyd

family: Beecher (10 September)

book: Tintner, The Book World of Henry James (no presentation) (in Neumann Library holdings)

report: The Jameses, chs. 7, 8 (24 September)

report: "Jack London and the Movies" (3 Dec.) (copy from instructor)

 

Will Deese

family: Adams (24 September)

book: Hock, Henry James and Pragmatic Thought (12 Nov.) (in Neumann Library holdings)

report: The Jameses, chapters 9, 10 (1 Oct.)

 

 

Linton Gilling

book: Habegger, The Father (29 October) (borrow instructor's copy)

family: Dumas (17 September)

report: The Jameses, chapters 17, 18 (12 Nov.)

 

 

Melinda Hawkins

book: Kaplan, Henry James: The Imagination of Genius (19 Nov.) (if not in Neumann Library or local library, borrow instructor's copy)

family: Coleridge (24 Sept.)

report: 2 articles on The Bostonians (22 Oct.) (copies from instructor)

 

 

Ken Hoffman

family: Mather (22 Oct.)

book: Wegelin, The Image of Europe in Henry James (12 Nov.) (book is in Neumann Library holdings)

report: The Jameses, chs. 1, 2 (3 Sept.)

 

 

Charity Jones

book: Lewis, Edith Wharton (no presentation) (book should be in Neumann Library or local library, or borrow instructor's copy) (assignment is cross-listed with Marsha Renals)

family: Faulkner (3 Dec.)

report: 2 articles on Daisy Miller (3 Sept.) (copies from instructor)

report: "Toward a Phenomenology of Cinematic and Electronic Presence" (19 Nov.) (copy from instructor)

 

 

Kimberly Jones

book: Habegger, Henry James and the "Woman Business" (no presentation) (book is in Neumann Library--assignment is cross-listed with Tina Cardona Billington)

family: Lowell (1 Oct.)

report: The Jameses, Appendix B (3 Dec.)

report: "Rediscovering Jane Eyre through its Adaptations" (8 Oct.) (copy from instructor)

 

Virginia Lively

family: Willis, "Fern" (22 Oct.)

book: Seymour, A Ring of Conspirators (no presentation) (in Neumann library

report: "The concept of literacy in print and film" (24 Sept.) (copy from instructor)

report: The Jameses, chapters 15, 16 (5 Nov.)

 

 

Becky Nelson

family: Bronte (29 Oct.)

book: Jean Strouse, Alice James (1 Oct.) (book is either in Neumann library or you may borrow instructor's copy)

report: review(s) of film of Daisy Miller (3 September)

 

 

Cheryl Osnayo-Grife

book: Poirier, The Comic Sense of Henry James (17 September)

family: Masters (3 Dec.)

report: Cheryl Osnayo-Grife, film review(s) of The Innocents (29 October)

 

 

Claudia Pratka

book: Cotkin, William James: Public Philosopher (5 Nov.)

family: Warner (12 Nov.)

report: film review of The Bostonians (15 Oct.)

 

 

Marsha Renals

book: Lewis, Edith Wharton (22 Oct.) (Neumann library or other library should have copy, or borrow instructor's copy) (this assignment is cross-listed with Charity Jones)

family: Channing (15 Oct.)

report: film review(s) of The Heiress (10 Sept.)

 

 

 

Gayle Shipp

book: Shine, The Fictional Children of Henry James (no presentation) (book is in Neumann Library holdings)

family: Howe and Ward (8 October)

report: The Jameses, chs. 5, 6 (17 September)

report: "Fitzgerald and the Movies" (12 Nov.) (copy from instructor)

 

 

Christina Wilkinson

family: Dreiser (5 November)

book: Leon Edel, Henry James: A Life (no presentation) (book is in Neumann Library holdings)

report: film review(s) of Campion's The Portrait of a Lady (24 Sept.)

report: "Squandered Possibilities: The Film Versions of Dreiser's Novels" (19 Nov.) (copy from instructor)

 

 

 

 

 

 

LITR 5733: Seminar in American Culture-Henry James: Family & Film

Fall 1997-98 University of Houston-Clear Lake

for *encyclopedia-style report on a literary family

            Indicate your first 5 choices in ascending order.  That is, put a 1 by the family you'd most like, 2 by second choice, etc.

 

___Adams: John Adams, Abigail Adams, John Quincy Adams, Charles Francis Adams, Henry Adams, Marian Hooper Adams, Brooks Adams

 

___Beecher: Harriet Beecher Stowe, Catharine Beecher, Henry Ward Beecher, Lyman Beecher, and Charlotte Perkins Gilman

 

___Bronte: Charlotte Bronte, Emily Bronte, Ann Bronte

 

___Browning: Charles Browning, Elizabeth Barrett Browning

 

___Channing: William Ellery Channing, W. E. Channing II, William Henry Channing

 

___Coleridge: Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Hartley Coleridge

 

___Cooper: James Fenimore Cooper, Susan Fenimore Cooper, and Constance Fenimore Cooper (friend of Henry James)

 

___Dumas: Alexandre Dumas (Dumas pere) (1802-1870), Alexandre Dumas (Dumas fils) (1824-1895)

 

___Harding Davis: Rebecca Harding Davis and Richard Harding Davis

 

___Dreiser: Theodore Dreiser and Paul Dresser (songwriter)

 

___Faulkner: grandfather of William Faulkner (spelled Falkner); William Faulkner

 

___Howe and Ward: Julia Ward Howe, Samuel Gridley Howe, Laura Elizabeth Richards, Maud Howe Elliott, Samuel Ward, and F. Marion Crawford

 

___Lowell: James Russell Lowell, Amy Lowell, Percival Lowell, Robert Lowell

 

___Masters: Edgar Lee Masters and Hilary Masters

 

___Mather: Richard Mather, Increase Mather, Cotton Mather, and Samuel Mather

 

___Warner: Susan B. Warner, Anna B. Warner

 

___Willis, "Fern": Sara P. Willis (Fanny Fern) and Nathaniel P. Willis + father and in-laws

 

__ Other literary family: _______________________

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

LITR 5733: Seminar in American Culture-Henry James: Family & Film

Fall 1997-98 University of Houston-Clear Lake

            Indicate your preference in terms of which book to review in ascending order--that is, put a 1 by the book you'd most like, 2 by the second, etc, up to 5.  Some of these books are in Neumann Library, some are in my holdings (you may borrow), and some must be acquired through inter-library loan.

__ George Cotkin.  William James: Public Philosopher. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1990.

 

__ Edel, Leon.  Henry James: A Life.  NY: Harper and Row, 1985.

 

__ Alfred Habegger.  The Father: A Life of Henry James, Sr..  New York: Farrar, Strauss, and Giroux, 1994.

 

__ Alfred Habegger.  Henry James and the "Woman Business". Cambridge UP, 1989.

 

__ Richard A. Hock.  Henry James and Pragmatic Thought: A Study in the Relationship between the Philosophy of William James and the Literary Art of Henry James.  Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1974?

 

__ Fred Kaplan.  Henry James: The Imagination of Genius. A Biography.  London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1992.

 

__ R. W. B. Lewis.  Edith Wharton: A Biography.  New York: Harper Colophon, 1975.

 

__ Jane Maher.  Biography of Broken Fortunes: Wilky and Bob, Brothers of William, Henry and Alice James (1986)

 

__ Sheldon Novick.  Henry James: The Young Master (New York: Random House, 1996)

 

__ Richard Poirier.  The Comic Sense of Henry James: A Study of the Early Novels.  NY: Oxford UP, 1960.

 

__ Miranda Seymour.  A Ring of Conspirators: Henry James and His Literary Circle, 1895-1915.  Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1988.

 

Muriel G. Shine.  The Fictional Children of Henry James.  Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1968.

 

__ Jean Strouse.  Alice James: The Life of the Brilliant but Neglected Younger Sister of William and Henry James.  Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1980.

 

__ Adeline R. Tintner.  The Book World of Henry James: Appropriating the Classics.  Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Research Press, 1987.

 

__ Christof Wegelin.  The Image of Europe in Henry James  Dallas: Southern Methodist University Press, 1958.