Authors: Edith Wharton, Anita Brookner
ISBN-13: 9780684801230, ISBN-10: 068480123X
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
Date Published: August 1995
Edition: Reprint
One of America's most important novelists, Edith Wharton was a refined, relentless chronicler of the Gilded Age and its social mores. Along with close friend Henry James, she helped define literature at the turn of the 20th century, even as she wrote classic nonfiction on travel, decorating and her own life.
Edith Wharton (1862-1937) was born into an old, wealthy New York family characterized by its devotion to tradition and its repression of emotion. Wharton was quite unhappily married, finally divorcing her husband after many years of separation. Her writing is marked by its portrayal of women who struggle to escape from the constraints placed on them, women trying to live in a future state of freedom that hasn't yet arrived. Lily Bart, heroine of The House of Mirth (1905), is typical of these heroines, in that her determination to live as a modern woman and her need to conform to social standards produce such conflict that she is ultimately undone by it. The Age of Innocence (1920) describes another such conflict between past and future, as a love forbidden by the hidebound world of Old New York (a world Wharton knew all too well) becomes impossible even when the old strictures are loosened, as the rules themselves have deadened those who follow them to the possibility of freedom.
About the Series | ||
About This Volume | ||
Pt. 1 | The House of Mirth: The Complete Text | |
Introduction: Biographical and Historical Contexts | 3 | |
The Complete Text | 25 | |
Pt. 2 | The House of Mirth: A Case Study in Contemporary Criticism | |
A Critical History of The House of Mirth | 309 | |
Cultural Criticism and The House of Mirth | 326 | |
What Is Cultural Criticism? | 326 | |
Cultural Criticism: A Selected Bibliography | 337 | |
A Cultural Perspective: The Traffic in Women: A Cultural Critique of The House of Mirth | 340 | |
Marxist Criticism and The House of Mirth | 359 | |
What Is Marxist Criticism? | 359 | |
Marxist Criticism: A Selected Bibliography | 372 | |
A Marxist Perspective: Debasing Exchange: Edith Wharton's The House of Mirth | 375 | |
Feminist Criticism and The House of Mirth | 391 | |
What Is Feminist Criticism? | 391 | |
Feminist Criticism: A Selected Bibliography | 398 | |
A Feminist Perspective: The Name of the Lily: Edith Wharton's Feminism(s) | 404 | |
Deconstruction and The House of Mirth | 419 | |
What Is Deconstruction? | 419 | |
Deconstruction: A Selected Bibliography | 429 | |
A Deconstructionist Perspective: Death by Speculation: Deconstructing The House of Mirth | 431 | |
Psychoanalytic Criticism and The House of Mirth | 447 | |
What Is Psychoanalytic Criticism? | 447 | |
Psychoanalytic Criticism: A Selected Bibliography | 459 | |
A Psychoanalytic Perspective: The Daughter's Dilemma: Psychoanalytic Interpretation and Edith Wharton's The House of Mirth | 464 | |
Glossary of Critical and Theoretical Terms | 483 | |
About the Contributors | 497 |