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Books : Releases : Spring 2008

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Conrads Trojan Horses (cloth)
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Conrads Trojan Horses (cloth)

Retail Price $40.00
Sale Price $32.00
Conrad Studies / Literary Criticism
288 pages | 6 x 9 | cloth


Published 07/ 2008
978-0-89672-633-8

A fresh look at one of modern literature’s most intriguing figures

Conrad’s Trojan Horses (cloth)

Imperialism, Hybridity, and the Postcolonial Aesthetic

Tom Henthorne, with foreword by Andrea White

“With fresh outlooks on his most important and vital works such as Heart of Darkness, “Conrad’s Trojan Horses” is entertaining and enlightening, sure to give new explanations of an important figure’s work.” --Midwest Book Review With references to his work appearing everywhere from the New Yorker to The Simpsons, Joseph Conrad remains one of the twentieth century’s most widely discussed literary figures. And yet it may be that an abundant scholarship has pigeonholed Conrad as an early modernist. Tom Henthorne counters that Conrad’s work can be best understood in relation to that of such early twentieth-century writers as S. K. Ghosh and Solomon Plaatje—postcolonialists who developed innovative ways of cloaking their anti-imperialism when working with British publishers. In Almayer’s Folly, An Outcast of the Islands, and his first short stories, Conrad attacks imperialism overtly. Yet as he began to work with more conservative publishers to acquire a larger, imperial audience, he developed a Trojan Horse strategy, deliberately obfuscating his radical politics through his use of multiple narrators, irony, free indirect discourse, and other devices that are now associated with modernism. Sensitive to the breadth of his prospective audience, Henthorne offers an engaging and accessible analysis of Conrad’s canon, from the early novels and short stories to the major works, including The Nigger of the Narcissus, Heart of Darkness, Lord Jim, and Nostromo. He also considers critical responses to Conrad and the influence Conrad has had upon modernist and postcolonial writers.



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