Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Stafford, Jean - Morris Dickstein (review date 1969)
Stafford, Jean - Morris Dickstein (review date 1969)
Morris Dickstein (review date 1969)
SOURCE: "Domesticated Modernism," in The New Republic, Vol. 160, No. 10, March 8, 1969, pp. 25-7.
[In the following review of The Collected Stories of Jean Stafford, Dickstein compares Stafford's style and themes to those of American writer Henry James.]
To do justice to the stories of Jean Stafford, even to her recent ones; we need a degree of historical sympathy. They take us back to a time in the 1940's when Henry James was an insurgent influence among American writers, when ethnic writers had not yet transmitted the brooding vitality of their subcultures into the center of our imaginative awareness. Miss Stafford's elegant and sad Wasp Manhattan is closer to Washington Square than to Seize the Day. Her lonely Americans abroad match their gauche innocence against European civility and corruption. She writes Jamesian social comedies and Jamesian horror-stories and tales as...
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- Introduction
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Criticism
- Howard Mumford Jones (review date 1953)
- William Peden (review date 1953)
- Olga W. Vickery (essay date 1962)
- Eleanor Perry (review date 1964)
- Honor Tracy (review date 1964)
- Thomas Curley (review date 1965)
- Guy Davenport (review date 1969)
- Morris Dickstein (review date 1969)
- Irving Malin (review date 1969)
- Joyce Carol Oates (essay date 1979)
- Mary Ellen Williams Walsh (essay date 1982)
- William G. Leary (essay date 1983)
- Mary Ellen Williams Walsh (essay date 1985)
- William G. Leary (essay date 1986)
- Maureen Ryan (essay date 1987)
- Bruce Bawer (essay date 1988)
- Stacey D'Erasmo (essay date 1992)
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