Close Reads Podcast

Age of Innocence: Chapters I-IX

Jan 6, 2026
Dive into the complexities of Edith Wharton's world as the hosts explore Newland Archer's perception and his role in the Gilded Age. They compare Wharton's social satire with Wodehouse's humor, highlighting the contrasts in tone. The Countess Olenska sparks debates about cultural freedom versus societal convention. Discussions on love reveal Newland's conflicting desires, the nature of his relationships, and how social expectations shape their realities. Predictions of impending tragedy add an intriguing layer to the literary analysis.
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ANECDOTE

Wharton's Return To Youth

  • David notes Wharton wrote the novel after WWI while revisiting childhood memories in her 50s.
  • He links her European wartime experience to the book's backward glance at youth and social change.
INSIGHT

Old-World Aspiration, New-World Anxiety

  • Edith Wharton revisits her youth to examine the Gilded Age's clash between old-world aspiration and American anxiety.
  • The novel frames social change as tension between tradition's mimicry and an inherently less-rooted American aristocracy.
INSIGHT

Satire With Dread

  • The book mixes satirical observation with a darker, tragic tone unlike P.G. Wodehouse's comic treatment.
  • Similar social satire exposes manners, but Wharton adds dread and moral seriousness to the critique.
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