• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: The Ivory Tower : The Cessation of Concern
  • Contributor: Bellringer, Alan W.
  • imprint: Cambridge University Press (CUP), 1976
  • Published in: Journal of American Studies
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1017/s002187580001361x
  • ISSN: 0021-8758; 1469-5154
  • Keywords: General Social Sciences ; General Arts and Humanities
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: <jats:p>Henry James's <jats:italic>The Ivory Tower</jats:italic> (1917) has suffered a similar fate to that of other incomplete last novels; most critical discussion has centred on the way it would have ended, taking into account resemblances with earlier works. This line of enquiry has not been very profitable; James's late style is too complex and rich to tempt anyone to continue <jats:italic>The Ivory Tower</jats:italic> in the way that ‘ Another Lady ’ has recently gone on with <jats:italic>Sanditon</jats:italic>. In any case one cannot legitimately say one wishes that James had lived to finish <jats:italic>The Ivory Tower</jats:italic>, since in fact he lived on without doing so; he had enough time to complete it if he had wanted. His general intentions were clear as we know from the ample notes he left. Why then did James give up? He stopped with the outbreak of the First World War, no doubt on the day war broke out. The really interesting critical question with regard to <jats:italic>The Ivory Tower</jats:italic> is: What is there in the novel, in its design as well as in its completed opening, which James found contradicted by war? James's imagination found the creative act of writing <jats:italic>The Ivory Tower</jats:italic> incompatible with war-time experience. He turned to other work, such as <jats:italic>The Sense of the Past</jats:italic>.</jats:p>