Sexuality and the Erotic in the Fiction of Joseph ConradAwarded third place for The Adam Gillon Book Award in Conrad Studies 2009 |
From inside the book
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... narrator with himself , but Conrad was accompanied by his wife and family when he met Count Szembek in Capri , while the narrator of the tale seems to have no family with him ( he dines alone with the Count ) . Indeed , when the narrator ...
... narrator himself is – especially given his own later suspicions of the Count ( ' it is in human nature to believe the worst ; and I confess I eyed him stealthily , wondering what he had been up to ' ) . Moreover the short sentence ' His ...
... narrator is eventually to be offered , he makes ' plaintive expostulations ' to the supercilious Hamilton . ) The reader's sense of the narrator is thus formed at this early stage of the novella in terms of his disdain for a weak and ...
Contents
Lord Jim The ShadowLine and Victory | 17 |
The exotic and the erotic in An Outcast of the Islands | 61 |
The erotics of cruelty in A Smile of Fortune | 77 |
Copyright | |
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