The Literature Book

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186


SHE IS WRITTEN


IN A FOREIGN


TONGUE


THE PORTRAIT OF A LADY (1881), HENRY JAMES


M


uch has been made
of the supposed
psychological and
cultural differences between
Europeans (notably the British)
and Americans—whether in
language, humor, or social
etiquette. In Europe, the debate
often centers on Americanisms
that are seen to be creeping into
European cultures.
Similar preoccupations have
been reflected in literature, with
early transatlantic fiction often
exploring cultural differences,
but with a particular focus on the
impact of the Old World (Europe)
on American sensibilities. Although

the 18th century had seen a political
and economic breach in Anglo–
American relations that led to
American independence in 1776,
there remained a strong, though at
times antagonistic, bond between
the two. As a nation, the US gained
confidence, and saw a growth in
the affluent classes and an increase
in tourism and transatlantic travel.

Innocents abroad
One prominent example of an
American with a taste for travel
and an eye for cultural difference
was the expatriate Henry James.
He viewed his fellow Americans
with detachment, and his novels
examined in depth what it meant
to be an American.
Like so many of his works, The
Portrait of a Lady depicts a cast of
mainly American characters in a
European setting. The self-made
Caspar Goodwood is a symbol
of his nation—enterprising and
forthright. He is contrasted with
Gilbert Osmond, who has adopted
European manners and values,
a morally corrupt man who poses
as an aesthete, a man of taste.
It is through the novel’s central
character, Isabel Archer, that the
tensions between Old and New

IN CONTEXT


FOCUS
Transatlantic fiction

BEFORE
1844 In Martin Chuzzlewit,
Charles Dickens offers an early
piece of transatlantic fiction,
set in England and the US.

1875 The Way We Live Now,
a satirical novel by English
writer Anthony Trollope,
follows corrupt European
financier Augustus Melmotte
and his American investments.

AFTER
1907 American author Edith
W ha rton’s Madame de
Treymes revolves around
Americans living in France.

1926 In The Sun Also Rises,
American author Ernest
Hemingway presents a group
of young American and British
expatriates in Paris and Spain.

1955 In Vladimir Nabokov’s
Lolita, European Humbert
Humbert pursues the young
Lolita across the US.

If we’re not good
Americans we’re certainly
poor Europeans; we’ve no
natural place here.
The Portrait of a Lady

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