Sexuality and the Erotic in the Fiction of Joseph ConradAwarded third place for The Adam Gillon Book Award in Conrad Studies 2009 |
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intelligent and very sympathetic ' , and that in a 1916 letter to John Quinn , written
after Casement ' s arrest , in which Conrad writes that already in Africa he had
judged that Casement ' was a man , properly speaking , of no mind at all . I don ' t
...
Because these are not of the time in which or about which Conrad is writing , they
prevent his making contact with the erotic as he or his contemporaries lived it .
Chance , the latter part of which was written at about the same time as these ...
... apparently relegated to the realm of women , unleashed the writer ' s own
pathological fear of losing his “ masculine ” self and his deeply rooted misogyny ,
which is nowhere more conspicuous than when he sets out to “ write for women ”
.
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Contents
Closeted characters and cloistered critics in Il Conde | 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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