Conrad and Women
Series: Oxford English Monographs;
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Product details:
- Publisher Clarendon Press
- Date of Publication 30 September 1999
- ISBN 9780198184485
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages260 pages
- Size 224x144x19 mm
- Weight 441 g
- Language English
- Illustrations illustrations 0
Categories
Short description:
This book challenges the traditional image of Conrad as writer of the sea, a man in a man's world. It re-establishes the importance of significant women in his life, and his engagement with women's writing and the female readers of his fiction. Rethinking received views of Conrad as a modernist writer, it explores the experimentation of his later, less familiar works, first published in the women's pages of popular journals.
MoreLong description:
Supported by an enduring critical paradigm, the traditional account of Conrads career privileges his public image as man of the sea, addressing himself to a male audience and male concerns. This book challenges received assumptions by recovering Conrad's relationship to women not only in his life but in his fiction and among his readers. The existing interplay of criticism, biography, and marketing has contributed to a masculinist image associated with a narrow body of modernist texts. Instead, Susan Jones reinstates the female influences arising from his early Polish life and culture; his friendship with the French writer Marguerite Poradowska; his engagement with popular women's writing; and his experimentation with visuality as his later works appear in the visual contexts of womens pages of popular journals. By foregrounding less familiar novels such as Chance (1913) and the neglected Suspense (unfinished and published posthumously, 1925), she emphasises the range and continuity of Conrad's concerns, showing that his later discussions of gender and genre often originate in the period of the great sea tales. Conrad also emerges as an acute reader and critic of popular forms, while his unexpected entry into important contemporary debates about female identity invites us to rethink the nature of his contribution to modernism.
Jones constructs a convincing portrait of a man trapped between the dictates of domesticity and adventure ... a very thorough and insightful study which throws light on a little-covered area of Conrad's work
Table of Contents:
Editorial Note
Introduction
Conrad, Women, and the Critics
Woman as Hero: Conrad and the Polish Romantic Tradition
Conrad and Marguerite Poradowska
Chance: 'a fine adventure'
The Three Texts of Chance
Marketing for Women Readers
Visuality and Gender in Late Conrad
Suspense and the Novel of Sensation
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index