[On August 2nd,
this AmericanStudier’s amazing younger sister
celebrates her birthday. So this week in her honor I’ll AmericanStudy
interesting American siblings!]
On the
influential and inspiring relationship between America’s most talented pair of
brothers.
Of all the
topics I’ve researched, pondered, and analyzed over this blog’s nearly nine years,
I don’t think I’ve spent anywhere near as much time thinking about any one of
them (or maybe even all of them combined) compared to the relationship between
two close (in age and every other sense) brothers. My sons are 15.5 months
apart (I know I should just say 16, but no, those two additional weeks count!),
and as far as I can tell, few if any aspects of their young lives (at least
until my older son leaves for college) are going to be untouched by that fact,
and by the complex interconnections it has already produced and continues to
produce. Obviously I have my fondest hopes for what that will mean (exemplified
right now by the way they hold hands as they walk into summer tennis camp
together in the morning) and my scariest worries about it (such as my fear that
if they drift apart it will have a profoundly negative influence on both of
their futures), but no matter what, this is clearly going to be a defining
relationship and influence in each of their lives.
I’m not
trying to put too much pressure on the boys, but you know who else were born
almost exactly 15.5 months apart? William
and Henry James, the brothers whose influences and talents extended into
virtually every aspect of late 19th and early 20th
century American and British society and culture. Perhaps the older William’s far-reaching investigations into
medicine, psychology, philosophy, and religion impacted more conversations and
communities than did the
younger Henry’s work as an author of fiction, drama, travel
writing, literary criticism, and autobiographies; but just as those branches of
the sciences and social sciences would not have been the same without William’s
impacts, so too were American and English literature and culture
profoundly impacted
by Henry’s works and ideas, style and themes. While I have no doubt that the
brothers would gladly have quarreled over whose legacy was more significant,
probably while at the same time making the case for each other’s importance,
the truth is that the combination is more impressive, and more accurate to
their collective legacies, than the competition.
Perhaps
the most overt and poignant tribute to that brotherly combination was written
by Henry himself, in the opening chapters of his memoir A Small Boy and Others (1913).
William had died a few years earlier, in 1910, and while any memoir is likely
produced by a number of psychological factors, there’s no question that his
brother was heavily on Henry’s mind as he wrote this one. The opening chapter,
in fact, begins this way: “In the attempt to place together some
particulars of the early life of William James and present him in his setting,
his immediate native and domestic air, so that any future gathered memorials of
him might become the more intelligible and interesting, I found one of the
consequences of my interrogation of the past assert itself a good deal at the
expense of some of the others.” It’s not at all clear at this point, nor for
many chapters, whether the titular small boy is Henry or William; and since the
text continues to focus on the pair of them for many more chapters (indeed more
than half of the chapters), it could with just as much accuracy be titled Two Small Boys. Boys whose lives and
legacies would likewise always and compellingly be interconnected.
Last siblings
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Sibling stories you’d highlight?
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