Bowdoin

English 015 - Americans Abroad
01B: Daisy Miller


Photographer vs. Movie Director

Category: 01B: Daisy Miller | Karen Tang

The obvious difference between Mark Twain’s Innocents Abroad and Henry James’s Daisy Miller is the point of view the author writes from. Mark Twain writes from the first person’s perspective, and Henry James writes from the third person’s perspective. Interestingly, at first we would assume that the novel written...
entire entry

Posted by ktang on October 07, 2003 at 11:12 AM


james v. twain

Category: 01B: Daisy Miller | Ben Ledue

While both stories reveal the apparent ignorance and arrogance of American travelers, in his Daisy Miller, Henry James presents a situation in which the characters are immersed in their surroundings, whereas Mark Twain fails to reveal either his or his companions's interaction with the people and places they encounter. Twain's...
entire entry

Posted by on September 18, 2003 at 10:24 PM


A Child's Plea

Category: 01B: Daisy Miller | Meg Gray

“An urchin of nine or ten” approaches an American in a foreign country with a plea. What reaction does the child get? Obviously, there are many different answers to this question. But Mark Twain and Henry James provide strikingly opposite possibilities in their writing, Twain in The Innocents Abroad...
entire entry

Posted by on September 16, 2003 at 11:18 AM


Interactions

Category: 01B: Daisy Miller | Meaghan Tanguay

The literary work of James’s Daisy Miller and Twain’s The Innocents Abroad both center on excitingly different interactions between their American characters and the foreign people they meet while abroad. Twain spends most of the time depicting the people he meets in his tour of Europe, Syrian villages, and finally...
entire entry

Posted by on September 16, 2003 at 11:11 AM


Details

Category: 01B: Daisy Miller | Tom Lakin

Although both Mark Twain’s Innocents Abroad and Henry James’s Daisy Miller deal with the experiences of Americans abroad, both contrast greatly in the area of character exploration. Twain focuses on group description, painting sweeping portraits of his collection of American compatriots while avoiding individualized character development. James, on the other...
entire entry

Posted by on September 16, 2003 at 10:40 AM


An Ignorant American

Category: 01B: Daisy Miller | Bryan Ciborowski

Mrs. Costello describes Daisy Miller as being “uncultivated” and “very common.” I couldn’t agree more. Daisy Miller’s actions abroad reveal her ignorance to her surroundings in Europe. Mr. Winterbourne is so caught up in this “pretty American flirt’s” looks that he becomes oblivious to her disrespectful actions for a woman...
entire entry

Posted by on September 16, 2003 at 12:58 AM


American Portrayal

Category: 01B: Daisy Miller | Matt Nickel

In the short story ‘Daisy Miller’ by Henry James and several chapters from The Innocents Abroad by Mark Twain, the two authors portray Americans very differently. Henry James portrays Americans as being able to recognize the beauty of European society and culture, while Twain portrays himself and other Americans...
entire entry

Posted by on September 16, 2003 at 12:17 AM


James/Twain Blog

Category: 01B: Daisy Miller | Simon Parsons

The manner in which the main character narrates each story offers the major point of contrast in these two works. Whereas in Daisy Miller Winterbourne appears as an advocate of “observation,” Twain, in The Innocents Abroad, becomes a firm supporter of “judging” and giving a personal interpretation of what...
entire entry

Posted by on September 15, 2003 at 10:01 PM


Blog1

Category: 01B: Daisy Miller | Thomas Buehrens

The primary difference between the way Henry James’s Daisy Miller depicts Americans abroad, and the way Mark Twain’s Innocents Abroad describes them, is in their basic attitude. Twain sees Americans in Europe as wanting to assimilate to the culture and fit in, marveling and embracing its differences from American...
entire entry

Posted by on September 15, 2003 at 09:44 PM


Mark Twain vs. Daisy Miller

Category: 01B: Daisy Miller | Kelsey Abbruzzese

When is ignorance attractive? It is when it comes in a pretty package like Daisy Miller instead of Mark Twain’s bobbing umbrella caravan in Syria. These Americans are uneducated in foreign terms, yet Twain is ashamed of his ignorance among the foreigners while Daisy’s mindless chatter is depicted as entertaining....
entire entry

Posted by on September 15, 2003 at 09:22 PM


Daisy Miller

Category: 01B: Daisy Miller | Andrew Plowman

Two old men are quietly observing Monet’s “Sunset in Venice.” The first man sees a beautiful masterpiece with every intricate detail exploding with life. The second man, however, sees a completely opposite scene, consisting of harsh brush strokes, inconsistencies, and an overall depressing effect. James and Twain mirror this...
entire entry

Posted by aplowman on September 15, 2003 at 08:52 PM


Twain vs. James

Category: 01B: Daisy Miller | Eric Robinson

After analyzing selected chapters from Mark Twain’s Innocence Abroad and Henry James’s Daisy Miller, one of the most intriguing contrasts between the two works pertains to the manner in which the narrator portrays the appearance of specific characters. In Twain’s work, most of the figures are presented based on...
entire entry

Posted by on September 15, 2003 at 07:54 PM


Daisy Miller

Category: 01B: Daisy Miller | Diana Heald

Mark Twain and Henry James were both Americans abroad during the same time period, yet their observations and outlooks differ in their regard for the citizens of the countries they visit. While Twain is primarily concerned with describing his interactions with foreigners and his observations of their cities and villages,...
entire entry

Posted by on September 15, 2003 at 07:21 PM


Goals of Tourism

Category: 01B: Daisy Miller | Hope Stockton

One of the differences between Innocents Abroad and Daisy Miller is how each set of Americans treats being a tourist. More specifically, the pace and depth the characters set for their appreciation and experience of foreign places. In Twain, this pace is very rapid. The group aboard Quaker City wants...
entire entry

Posted by on September 15, 2003 at 04:15 PM


A European Abroad

Category: 01B: Daisy Miller | Zac Milner

Although it takes place in Switzerland, the first two chapters of Daisy Miller focus on an “American watering-place” (3). With the exception of the Courier—who thrives on sucking up to Americans—every character in Daisy Miller is indeed from the States. Winterbourne, however, is completely out of touch with American...
entire entry

Posted by on September 15, 2003 at 03:53 PM


"Different" Americans

Category: 01B: Daisy Miller | Ross Stern

After examining selections from both Mark Twain’s Americans Abroad and Henry James’s Daisy Miller, it appears that both writers must have had very different experiences in their travels around the world. While neither of the men disagree on the beauty of many foreign lands, their depiction of the American...
entire entry

Posted by on September 15, 2003 at 01:21 PM


blog assignment

Category: 01B: Daisy Miller | Mark Phillipson

Daisy Miller was written around ten years after The Innocents Abroad, by an American who would choose to make his home overseas. How does James significantly differ from Twain in his depiction of Americans abroad? Answer by identifying details from each book that vividly exemplify a point of contrast between...
entire entry

Posted by mphillip on September 11, 2003 at 02:24 PM