Adapting Henry James to the Screen : Gender, Fiction, and Film

ISBN
9780810857070
$79.00
Author Raw, Laurence
Format Perfect
Details
  • 9.0" x 6.4" x 0.8"
  • Active Record
  • Individual Title
  • Books
  • 2007
  • 336
  • Yes
  • Print
  • 28
  • PS2127.F55A65 2007
One of Henry James's main achievements as a novelist was his ability to demonstrate how the notions of "masculinity" and "femininity" are socially constructed, depending on a variety of contradictory factors: social, political, sexual, and economic. His unique capacity to understand the ideological function of relationships often accepted as "natural" in late nineteenth century culture resulted in fictions that impress upon readers the oppressiveness inherent within them. Most adaptations of literary classics, however, tend to be influenced by Hollywood conventions that tend to reinforce dominant notions of gender and heterosexual relations. Adapting a novel for cinema or television is first and foremost a business enterprise, where the screenwriter has to take into account the wishes of conflicting interest groups: producers, stars, directors, and spectators. In Adapting Henry James to The Screen: Gender, Fiction and Film, author Laurence Raw suggests that most James adaptations have sought to shift attention away from the classical narrative to the spectator's interaction with that narrative. Raw demonstrates that while several adaptations have critically engaged with the subject of gender relations, they have often ended up by reinforcing rather than questioning accepted norms. Yet, there are instances where individual directors and/or screenwriters have bucked the trend and directly engaged with what people understand by 'masculine' and 'feminine' behavior, thus focusing on how the notions of 'masculinity' and 'femininity' are socially constructed, not only in the societies represented on screen, but in the spectators' world as well. This book shows how changing priorities affected the ways in which James's novels were translated to the screen, and how they examined the theme of gender relations. Not only does this represent a new departure for adaptation studies (which hitherto has largely focused on issues of textual fidelity), but it is a particularly appropriate methodology for studying James, who was perhaps the first modern novelist to grapple with the often conflicting concerns of artistic integrity and commercial potential. Raw discusses most of the major adaptations, beginning with Berkeley Square (1933) and culminating with James Ivory's The Golden Bowl. This book also offers new readings of well-known adaptations and examines works that have hitherto been critically neglected, such as The Lost Moment (1947), The House In The Square (1951), The Haunting of Hell House (1999), and four television versions of The Turn of the Screw produced between 1974 and 1999. Consequently, Adapting Henry James to the Screen is the most comprehensive survey yet published on Henry James's work on film and television.