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・ Notes of a Son and Brother
・ Notes of Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787
・ Notes of Love
・ Notes of Some Wanderings with the Swami Vivekananda
・ Notes on "Camp"
・ Notes on a Dream
・ Notes on a Scandal
・ Notes on a Scandal (film)
・ Notes on a Scandal (soundtrack)
・ Notes on Afghanistan and Baluchistan
・ Notes on Desire
・ Notes on James Mill
・ Notes on Linguistics
・ Notes on Muscovite Affairs
・ Notes on Nationalism
Notes on Novelists
・ Notes on Nursing
・ Notes on Ornette
・ Notes on Prosody
・ Notes on the Folklore of the Fjort
・ Notes on the Jewish Temple
・ Notes on the melody of things
・ Notes on the Network
・ Notes on the Port of St. Francis
・ Notes on the State of Virginia
・ Notes on the Synthesis of Form
・ Notes receivable
・ Notes to You
・ Notes Towards an African Orestes
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Notes on Novelists : ウィキペディア英語版
Notes on Novelists

''Notes on Novelists'' is a book of literary criticism by Henry James published in 1914. The book collected essays that James had written over the preceding two decades on French, Italian, English and American writers. The book also contained a controversial essay, ''The New Novel, 1914'', which passed judgment on various contemporary writers and occasioned much disagreement.
==Summary and themes==
This is one of the last books that James saw through the press, and it contains his most mature and considered opinions on a number of writers. For instance, George Sand, an early enthusiasm of his, here becomes only a fading though pretty memory: "Her work, beautiful, plentiful and fluid, has floated itself out to sea even as the melting snows of the high places are floated."
Balzac, though, remains James' most reliable guide and master. He admires to the last Balzac's accounts of the "generative and contributive circumstances, of every discernible sort," which surround and condition his characters. This is entirely different from George Sand's fatal "looseness" of description and specification.
James includes two essays on Italian writers, Gabriele D'Annunzio and Matilde Serao. He notes the eloquence and power of their descriptions of sexual passion, but he believes sex becomes too isolated from the rest of their characters' lives. It is presented as "...''only'' the act of a moment, beginning and ending in itself and disowning any representative character. From the moment it depends on itself alone for its beauty it endangers extremely its distinction, so precarious at the best. For what it represents, precisely, is poetically interesting; it finds its extension and consummation only in the rest of life." In ''The Wings of the Dove'' James provides a memorable example of how Densher and Kete's sexual passion does enter into the rest of their lives and becomes much more than the act of a moment.
In one of the ''London Notes'' James offers a last word on the forceful drama of Henrik Ibsen, whose mastery of the stage he clearly envied and could never emulate: "Well in the very front of the scene lunges, with extraordinary length of arm, the Ego against the Ego, and rocks, in a rigor of passion, the soul against the soul." Try as he might, James could never infuse such power into his plays.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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