Tuesday, April 7, 2015
Kathryn Wichelns' article "Collaborative Differences: Marguerite Duras, Eve Sedgwick, and “The Beast in the Jungle” appears in Comparative Literature 67.1 (Spring 2015)
Marguerite Duras's 1962 theatrical adaptation of
Henry James's short story offers a feminist alternative to Eve Sedgwick's
famous interpretation. The precise elements that for Duras reveal James's
interest in “feminine” forms of expression also are significant for queer
theoretical readers, after Sedgwick, who emphasize James's style rather than
his biography. However, in none of those recent discussions do notions of
temporal or stylistic queerness in James's work resonate with the ideas about
gendered time and language that are central to Duras's approach, and to
twentieth-century French feminism more generally. Duras's adaptation, grounded
in heteronormative assumptions, suffers from a parallel blind spot; James Lord,
her collaborator in the project, suggests that she undermined the queer
elements in both James's story and his own first draft. This article uses the
unexamined resonances between Duras's and Sedgwick's readings to offer a
possible counter-narrative to ongoing scholarly divisions among contemporary feminisms
and queer theories.
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