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He is the first to embrace Ellen into society although his intentions may be ... The Classic Novel: From Page to Screen. Ed. Giddings Robert Sheen Erica. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ': Part 2:


1
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2
Table of Contents (1)
  • The Age of Innocence
  • The Writer Edith Wharton
  • The Director Martin Scorsese
  • The Plot Chart
  • Character-analysis

3
Table of Contents (2)
  • 3 Melancholic scenes in Martin Scorseses film
  • the opening flowers scene along with a
    performance of Faust at the Academy of Music
  • the abstract painting with a faceless woman in
    Lenskas parlour
  • Mays wedding photos
  • ??
  • Ariadine or Dionysus?
  • ??????
  • ???????

4
Edith Wharton(18621937)Wikipedia
  • Born to a wealthy family in New York City on
    January 24, 1862.
  • Published in 1905, The House of Mirth was
    Wharton's first critically acclaimed novel.
  • She published volumes of short stories and
    novels, which earned her a faithful following,
    critical acceptance, and a Pulitzer Prize in 1921
    for The Age of Innocence.

Picture from http//www.salon.com/books/feature/2
000/12/21/wharton/index.html
5
The Writer Edith Wharton (1862-1937)
  • 1885, Wharton married Teddy Wharton, who was
    twelve years older and ended the marriage in
    1913.
  • Their marriage fell apart for Teddy had a
    mistress.
  • Also, Wharton had fallen in love with Morton
    Fullerton and had been sexually awakened.

6
The Writer Edith Wharton (1862-1937)
  • 1900-1938, created a lot of novels.
  • 1905, The House of Mirth marked the true
    beginning of her career.
  • 1911, Ethan Frome
  • During WWII, traveled extensively and helped with
    refugees in Paris, and only once again back to
    America for the Pulitzer prize for The Age of
    Innocence.

7
The Writer Edith Wharton (1862-1937)
  • F. Scott Fitzgerald, and Ernest Hemingway were
    all guests of hers at one time or another
  • Her friendship with Henry James influenced on
    her writing.

8
The Writer Edith Wharton (1862-1937)
  • The House of Mirth was published in 1905 when
    Edith Wharton was forty-three.
  • A novel of manners biting criticism of New York
    aristocracy

9
Martin Scorsese(1942-)
  • Martin Scorsese, born in 1942, is an American
    motion-picture director.
  • His films of the 1990s include an adaptation of a
    novel by American writer Edith Wharton, The Age
    of Innocence (1993).

Picture from wikipedia
10
The Age of Innocence
  • The novel takes place among New York City's upper
    class during the 1870s
  • when there was a small cluster of aristocratic
    "old revolutionary stock" families that ruled New
    York's social life.
  • First published during July to October 1920 in
    the Pictorial Review

Picture from http//glasscat.vox.com/library/bo
ok/6a00c2252aaad28e1d00c22529bbf8604a.html
11
Character-chart in The Age of Innocence
12
Major Characters-Newland Archer
  • . He lives with his widowed mother and his
    unmarried sister, and is engaged to May Welland.
  • . He fancies himself erudite and well-educated,
    not realizing how much his own thoughts and
    experiences are limited by his immediate
    environment.

13
Major Characters-Ellen Olenska
  • May's mysterious cousin
  • Returned to New York to seek a divorce
  • Her situation is scandalous and risks the good
    name of her family
  • She represents sophistication, worldliness, and
    tragedy.

14
Major Characters-May Welland
  • The sum of her New York society upbringing, and
    is beautiful, proper, and innocent.
  • Determined to be a perfect wife to Newland
  • May seems
  • childlike and carefree,
  • But also knowledgeable about the complexities of
    relationships than Newland is

15
Mrs. Manson Mingott (GradeSaver)
  • May and Ellen's grandmother. The matriarch of New
    York society.
  • Although she is the archetype of convention she
    attained her position by being defiant and
    aggressive in her youth.

16
Lawrence Lefferts
  • The "model of form" in New York society
  • He is addressed whenever matters of style or
    decorum are at issue.
  • Yet, ironically, he is a lying adulterer.

17
Sillerton Jackson  
  • An elderly gentleman and good friend of the
    Archer family
  • Jackson is the unofficial archivist of all New
    York gossip and family history.

18
Julius Beaufort
  • A scandalous womanizer
  • He represents "new" money and new standards.
  • He is the first to embrace Ellen into society
    although his intentions may be less than
    honorable.

19
Regina Beaufort
  • The wife of Julius Beaufort.
  • When Julius' reputation becomes mired in scandal,
    she appeals to Mrs. Manson Mingott, who is
    angered that she would ask the family for backing

20
Mr. and Mrs. Henry van der Luyden
  • A socially influential couple capable of making
    or breaking any reputation.
  • They are consistently in control of Ellen's fate.

21
Mr. Letterblair
  • Newland's boss at the law firm. Convinces Newland
    to persuade Ellen not to get a divorce.

22
1. The Flowers Scene
  • The pre-oedipal imaginary language reviews social
    systems by transgressing the constraints of the
    Symbolic language whose fixed connotations is
    opposed to poetic languages multiplication.

23
1. The Flowers Scene
  • Thus, Newlands desire of romantic love
    encourages him
  • to liberate from restricts of the signifying
    patriarchal society of manners
  • to create his imaginary craving on the fringes of
    new system of motherhood

24
2. The Abstract Picture
  • The second scene, describing Newlands impression
    on an abstract picture painted image of a
    faceless woman in white with a parasol hanging on
    the wall of Ellens living room

25
2. The Abstract Picture
  • In her essay Creative Visions (De) Constructing
    The Beautiful in Scorseses The Age of
    Innocence, Karli Lukas illustrates the meaning
    of this faceless woman image

26
2. The Abstract Picture
  • Yet this image is also proffered as an ironic
    symbol of Newlands perfect woman-someone who
    he is able to mould and manipulate into any
    woman. In Newlands case, this is the type of
    wife befitting his station-someone who captures
    and reflects his own narcissistic image.

27
3. Mays Wedding Photos
  • In the third scene, Scorseses use of wedding
    photographs to visualize true essences of
    Whartons novel to depict Mays character.

28
3. Mays Wedding Photos
  • The sequence of wedding photographs is staged in
    the film
  • just right after Newland imagines the possibility
    of breaking social restrictions,
  • which is then devastated by May and her familys
    decision to their marriage.

29
3. Mays Wedding Photos
  • In the following scene, the director cuts Mays
    images into 3 sequences
  • then reproduced in a multiplication into 3
    replica images presented in the 3 mirrors behind
    her

30
3. Mays Wedding Photos
  • Mays shifts of visions in this sequence,
    thereby, propose
  • not only that their mismatched marriage
  • but also her increasing influence on Newlands
    life as a conventional Victorian wife.

31
3. Mays Wedding Photos
  • Newlands subconscious fear of being consumed by
    the semiotic mother-image Ellen
  • that leads to maneuver himself out of this
    alliance with the good mother
  • and seeks at all costs to manifest his relation
    with the phallic mother-image May.

32
3. Mays Wedding Photos
  • May is a phallic mother who has a penis inside
    her body that could indicate her power.
  • Newlands alliance with May suggests
  • this imaginary matricide to Ellen who is an evil
    power devastating Newlands social position.

33
Ariadine or Dionysus?
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34
Ariadne or Dionysus?
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37
Websites Reference and Bibliography
  • A Film Review by James Berardinelli.
    http//www.reelviews.net/movies/a/age_inno.html
  • Spirituality and Practice. http//www.spirituali
    tyandpractice.com/films/films.php?id3540
  • Castellitto. George P. Imagism and Martin
    Scorsese Images Suspended in Time Extended.
    Literature Film Quarterly 26.1 (1998) 23-29.
  • Christe, Ian. The Scorsese Interview. Sight and
    Sound 42.2 (Feb. 1994) 10-15.
  • Horne, Philip. The Age of Innocence Scorsese,
    Wharton and James. Film Studies An
    International Review 3 (2002) 5-17.
  • Lee, Robert A. Watching Manners Martin
    Scorsese's The Age of Innocence, Edith Wharton's
    The Age of Innnocence. The Classic Novel From
    Page to Screen. Ed. Giddings Robert Sheen Erica.
    Manchester, England--New York, NY Manchester
    UP--St. Martin's, 2000. 163-78.
  • Levine, Jessica. Delicate Pursuit Discretion in
    Henry James and Edith Wharton. Studies in Major
    Literary Authors V. 13. New York Routledge,
    2002.
  • Lukas, Karli. Creative Visions (De)
    constructing The Beautiful in Scorseses The Age
    of Innocence. Senses of Cinema. 8 Sept 2006
    lthttp//www.sensesofcinema.com/contents/ctequ/03/2
    5/age_of_innocence.htmlgt.
  • Murphy, Kathleen. Artist of the Beautiful. Film
    Comment 29.6 (Nov.-Dec. 1993) 11-15.
  • Nicholls, Mark. "Male Melancholia and Martin
    Scorsese's The Age of Innocence." Film Quarterly
    58.1 (2004) 25-35.
  • Olin-Ammentorp, Julie. Wharton through a
    Kristevan Lens The Maternality of The Gods
    Arrive. Wretched Exotic Essays on

38
Websites Reference and Bibliography
  • Skaggs, Carmen Trammell. Looking through the
    Opera Glasses Performance and Artifice in The
    Age of Innocence." Mosaic A Journal for the
    Interdisciplinary Study of Literature 37.1
    (2004) 49-61.
  • Stern, Lesley. The Scorsese Connection.
    Bloomington and Indianapolis Indiana UP, 1995.
  • Tebbetts, Terrell. Conformity, Desire, and the
    Critical Self in Wharton's The Age of Innocence.
    Philological Review 30.1 (2004) 25-38.
  • The Age of Innocence Script. (recommended)
    http//www.script-o-rama.com/movie_scripts/a/age-o
    f-innocence-script-transcript.html
  • Villasur, Belâen Vidal. Classic Adaptations,
    Modern Reinventions Reading the Image in the
    Contemporary Literary Film. Screen 43.1 (2002)
    5-18.
  • Wagner-Martin, Linda. The age of innocence A
    Novel of ironic nostalgia. New York Twayne
    Publishers, c1996.
  • Wharton, Edith. The Age of Innocence. New York
    Scribners, 1970.
  • Wikipedia on The Age of Innocence.
    http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Age_of_Innocence_
    (film)

39
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