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  1. Daisy Miller, by Henry James The text is that of the first American appearance in book form, 1879. DAISY MILLER: A STUDY IN TWO PARTS PART I At the little town of Vevey, in Switzerland, there is a particularly comfortable hotel. There are, indeed, many hotels, for the entertainment of tourists is the business of the place,

  2. Daisy Miller Full Book Summary. At a hotel in the resort town of Vevey, Switzerland, a young American named Winterbourne meets a rich, pretty American girl named Daisy Miller, who is traveling around Europe with her mother and her younger brother, Randolph. Winterbourne, who has lived in Geneva most of his life, is both charmed and mystified by ...

  3. Henry James artfully employs a variety of literary devices in “Daisy Miller” to enrich the narrative, deepen the character portrayals, and enhance the thematic undertones. Let’s examine the top 10 literary devices used: Symbolism — James uses symbols, such as the Colosseum and Roman fever, to represent larger ideas.

  4. Americans Abroad. Daisy Miller was one of James’s earliest treatments of one of the themes for which he became best known: the expatriate or footloose American abroad. Americans abroad was a subject very much of the moment in the years after the Civil War. The postwar boom, the so-called Gilded Age, had given rise to a new class of American ...

  5. In Daisy Miller, Henry James particularly focuses on the group of a young American lady who encounters an unknown culture and society in Europe. It is assumed that Mill Temple, the cousin of James, is the model and inspiration for Daisy Miller. However, Henry James elaborated on his stud of Daisy and made it deeper.

  6. 9 de jul. de 2022 · Analysis of Henry James’s Daisy Miller. By NASRULLAH MAMBROL on July 9, 2022. Originally subtitled “A Study,” this novella was first published by Leslie Stephen, the father of Virginia Woolf, in the Cornhill Magazine. The choice of a British press cost Henry James his American rights. The sheer amount of pirated versions, however, hints ...

  7. Daisy Miller by Henry James New York Edition, 1909. NOTES: (1) Italics for emphasis indicated by upper case, by lower case for the word _I_. Foreign words and phrases, when italicized in the original, are indicated thus: _comme il faut_. Accent marks in foreign words have been removed.