Copyright © 1995 The Johns Hopkins University Press. All rights reserved.
The Henry James Review 16.3 (1995) 257-263
The Return of the Alien: Henry James in New
York, 1904
By Beverly Haviland, Vassar College
When Henry James returned to America after his absence of two decades he found to his
surprise that he did not return as a native but as an alien. He had expected to feel that he was
coming home, and when he got home, he found that there was unexpected company. During his
visit and afterwards while he was composing The American Scene, he began a process of
redefining his conception of national identity in a way that bears careful consideration for what it
suggests about how ethnic and racial identities are formed and transformed over time and under
changing circumstances.
1
He suggests a theory of how cultural transformation normally takes
place and offers an analysis of how the business culture of America deforms that process.
James's sense of cultural dispossession becomes for him, not a cause for nostalgic bitterness or
xenophobia as some have claimed, but a critical resource by means of which he creates a bond of
solidarity with all those who have been dispossessed of their heritage, including the people
whom we now call Native Americans. Wondering at the process of creating national identity, he
asks:
Who and what is an alien, when it comes to that, in a country peopled from the first
under the jealous eye of history? . . . Which is the American, by these scant measures?--
which is not the alien, over a large part of the country at least, and where does one put a
finger on the dividing line, or, for that matter, "spot" and identify any particular phase
of the conversion, any one of its successive moments? (AS 124)
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James rejects the idea that there is a "dividing line" between the native and the alien and that an
absolute conversion can take place. He theorizes instead that a kind of hyphenation of cultures is
not only possible but highly desirable. James's greatest fear is not that the already hyphenated
Anglo-Saxon cultural dominance would end but that the "'ethnic' synthesis" of the new America
would not tolerate increasing complexity (139). One consequence of this simplification would be
to leave him (as a writer) dispossessed of his native language, just as the "beautiful red man" had
been dispossessed of his native land (464). I wonder if we can say that this fear was exaggerated.
The work of rethinking his own relation to his national origins, his "supreme relation, . . . one's
relation to one's country--a conception made up so largely of one's countrymen and one's
countrywomen," is provoked, of course, by his being confronted with an enormous change in the
population of New York, the city of his birth and his youth (85). In 1904 more than a million
immigrants arrived at Ellis Island, and the composition of the population of New York had been
under radical revision since James was last in America in the 1880s. James writes that for the
native to witness "the visible act of ingurgitation on the part of our body politic and social"