Authors:
Offers a valuable contribution not only to Conrad and gender studies but to the ongoing critical discussion of Conrad’s relation to contemporary culture
Fills a vital gap in the study of Joseph Conrad through an in-depth discussion of his female characters
Focuses on a broad range of Conrad's late fiction including The Secret Agent, Chance, Victory, The Arrow of Gold, The Rescue, and The Rover
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Table of contents (8 chapters)
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Front Matter
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Back Matter
About this book
This volume considers Joseph Conrad’s use of multiple genres, including allusions to sensation fiction, pornography, anthropology, and Darwinian science, to respond to Victorian representations of gender in layered and contradictory representations of his own. In his stories and later novels, the familiar writer of sea stories centered on men moves to consider the plight of women and the challenges of renegotiating gender roles in the context of the early twentieth century. Conrad’s rich and conflicted consideration of subjectivity and alienation extends to some of his women characters, and his complex use of genre allows him both to prompt and to subvert readers’ expectations of popular forms, which typically offer recognizable formulas for gender roles. He frames his critique through familiar sensationalized typologies of women that are demonstrated in his fiction: the violent mother, the murderess, the female suicide, the fallen woman, the adulteress, and the traumatic victim. Considering these figures through the roles and the taxonomies that they simultaneously embody and disrupt, this study exposes internalized patriarchal expectations that Conrad presents as both illegitimate and inescapable.
Keywords
- Joseph Conrad
- Gender
- The Secret Agent
- Nineteenth-Century
- Feminism
- The Idiots Joseph Conrad
- Amy Foster Joseph Conrad
- Victory Joseph Conrad
- The Rescue Joseph Conrad
- The Return Joseph Conrad
- The Rover Joseph Conrad
- marriage Joseph Conrad
- The Arrow of Gold Joseph Conrad
- early-twentieth-century fiction
- British and Irish Literature
Authors and Affiliations
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Department of English, University of South Alabama, Mobile, USA
Ellen Burton Harrington
About the author
Ellen Burton Harrington is Associate Professor of English at the University of South Alabama. She has published previously on nineteenth-century sensation and detective fiction and the influence of these genres and criminal anthropology on the work of Joseph Conrad.
Bibliographic Information
Book Title: Conrad’s Sensational Heroines
Book Subtitle: Gender and Representation in the Late Fiction of Joseph Conrad
Authors: Ellen Burton Harrington
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-63297-1
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan Cham
eBook Packages: Literature, Cultural and Media Studies, Literature, Cultural and Media Studies (R0)
Copyright Information: The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s) 2017
Hardcover ISBN: 978-3-319-63296-4Published: 08 November 2017
Softcover ISBN: 978-3-319-87520-0Published: 24 August 2018
eBook ISBN: 978-3-319-63297-1Published: 25 October 2017
Edition Number: 1
Number of Pages: IX, 173
Topics: Twentieth-Century Literature, Nineteenth-Century Literature, European Literature