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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 December 2020
To be at all critically, or as we have been fond of calling it analytically minded … is to be subject to the superstition that objects and places, coherently grouped, disposed for human use and addressed to it, must have a sense of their own, a mystic meaning proper to themselves to give out: to give out, that is, to the participant at once so interested and so detached as to be moved to a report of the matter.
1 F. O. Matthiessen, “James and the Plastic Arts,” The Kenyon Review, v, no. 4 (1943), 533-550.
2 Austin Warren, “Myth and Dialectic in the Later Novels,” The Kenyon Review, v, no. 4 (1943), 551-568.