Conrad in the Nineteenth CenturyUniversity of California Press, 1981 M06 29 - 375 páginas “Nothing short of a masterpiece. . . . One of the great critical works produced since the 1950s.”—New York Times |
Contenido
CHAPTER | 1 |
Almayers Folly | 34 |
and Characterisation | 55 |
The Nigger of the Narcissus | 68 |
The Affirmations of Retrospect | 120 |
Heart of Darkness | 126 |
Victorian Progress | 147 |
Critical Perspectives | 168 |
Marlow and Henry James | 200 |
Lord Jim | 254 |
The Narrative Progress and Its Methods | 269 |
The Roles of Time and Narrative | 286 |
Jim and Marlow | 310 |
The Ending | 338 |
Epilogue | 357 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
actually Almayer's Folly appearance attitude become believe Blackwood Bobrowski Brierly captain chapter character chronological civilisation Congo Conrad wrote consciousness continued crew crew's critical death Donkin doubt dream Edward Garnett effect English episode experience expression fate feeling fiction final Flaubert Ford Ford Madox Ford French Garnett Heart of Darkness hereafter cited human idea imagination impressionism impressionist individual instance James Jim's Joseph Conrad kind Kurtz larger later letter literary literature London look Lord Jim Madame Bovary Marlow Marlow says Maupassant meaning memory mind modern moral Narcissus narrative narrator nature Nigger Norman Sherry novel novelist Outpost of Progress particular passage Patna Patusan Poland Polish preface present progress psychological reader reality romantic scene seems sense ship short stories Singleton social solidarity Stein suggested surely symbolic symbolist tell thematic theme thing thought tion traditional truth Victorian voyage words writing York Youth Zdzisław Najder