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The Turn of the Screw

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He is one of the founders and leaders of a school of realism ... Of or relating to a style of fiction that emphasizes the grotesque, mysterious, and desolate. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Turn of the Screw


1
The Turn of the Screw
  • By Henry James

2
  • Henry James, O.M. (April 15, 1843) February 28,
    1916), son of theologian Henry James Sr., brother
    of the philosopher and psychologist William James
    and diarist Alice James, was an American-born
    British author. He is one of the founders and
    leaders of a school of realism in fiction the
    fine art of his writing has led many academics to
    consider him the greatest master of the novel and
    novella form. He spent much of his life in
    England and became a British subject shortly
    before his death. He is primarily known for a
    series of major novels in which he portrayed the
    encounter of America with Europe. His plots
    centered on personal relationships, the proper
    exercise of power in such relationships, and
    other moral questions. His method of writing from
    the point of view of a character within a tale
    allowed him to explore the phenomena of
    consciousness and perception, and his style in
    later works has been compared to impressionist
    painting.
  • James insisted that writers in Great Britain and
    America should be allowed the greatest freedom
    possible in presenting their view of the world,
    as French authors were. His imaginative use of
    point of view, interior monologue and unreliable
    narrators in his own novels and tales brought a
    new depth and interest to realistic fiction, and
    foreshadowed the modernist work of the twentieth
    century. An extraordinarily productive writer, in
    addition to his voluminous works of fiction he
    published articles and books of travel writing,
    biography, autobiography, and criticism, and
    wrote plays, some of which were performed during
    his lifetime with moderate success. His
    theatrical work is thought to have profoundly
    influenced his later novels and tales.

3
What is parenthetical frame?
4
Point of View
  • What is point of view?
  • How important is it in telling a story? In
    determining its validity?
  • Is the narrator reliable?
  • Is the governess insane or
  • trustworthy?

5
Tone
  • The governess narrates with an attitude of
    intimate confidentiality that is biased and
    possibly unreliable.
  • What are the consequences or advantages to using
    this tone? First person? Past Tense?

6
Ambiguity
  • The end, in true modernist fashion, is
    deliberately vague.
  • What is going on?
  • Which elements
  • contribute to the
  • confusion?

7
Gothic
  • Of or relating to a style of fiction that
    emphasizes the grotesque, mysterious, and
    desolate.

8
Novella
  • A short prose tale often characterized by moral
    teaching or satire a short novel.
  • The Turn of the Screw first appeared in Colliers
    Weekly in twelve installments between January and
    April 1898.

9
  • Not until after World War I did anyone question
    the reliability of the governess as a narrator.
    With the publication of a 1934 essay by the
    influential Edmund Wilson, a revised view of the
    story began to gain currency.
  • Wilsons Freudian interpretation, that the
    governess is a sexually repressed hysteric and
    the ghosts mere figments of her overly excitable
    imagination, echoed what other critics like Henry
    Beers, Harold Goddard, and Edna Kenton had
    previously suggested in the 1920s.
  • Throughout the course of his life, Wilson
    continued to revise and rethink his
    interpretation of The Turn of the Screw, but all
    criticism since has had to confront the central
    ambiguity in the narrative.

10
  • Is the governess a hopeless neurotic who
    hallucinates the figures of Peter Quint and Miss
    Jessel, or is she a plucky young woman battling
    to save her charges from damnation?
  • Adherents of both views abound, though the former
    take on the story is rarer.
  • Other critics maintain that the beauty and terror
    of the tale reside in its utter ambiguity,
    arguing that both interpretations are possible
    and indeed necessary to make The Turn of the
    Screw the tour de force that it is.

11
  • What is the purpose of ambiguity?
  • What is the meaning of the work as a whole?
  • What role does punctuation play?
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