This essay considers the relationship between Robert Louis Stevenson’s well-loved adventure classic Treasure Island and his philosophical commitments to talk. For Stevenson, talking and adventuring share an experiential poetics that emphasizes responsiveness to unpredictable interactions. By examining several of Stevenson’s prose pieces, including “Talk and Talkers” and “My First Book” as well as Treasure Island, this essay argues that the novel aspires to translate the poetics of talk into a print medium. Treasure Island imagines itself as a form of “living print,” a work that, like Long John Silver’s parrot, seems more dynamic than print typically is, yet is still ultimately incapable of talk’s interactivity
This thesis seeks to place Robert Louis Stevenson as an important contributor to the emergence of Mo...
Robert Louis Stevenson continues to enjoy popular fame for his adventure tales, Treasure Island and ...
One rainy day in the summer of 1881, Robert Louis Stevenson entertained his stepson by sketching out...
This essay examines the depictions of colonial spaces and the failure of imperial endeavours in Robe...
This thesis explores Robert Louis Stevenson’s re-imagining of adventure narrative through the develo...
With Treasure Island, and its theoretical companion pieces “A Gossip on Romance” and “A Humble Remon...
Stevenson first entered fiction in the romantic novel of action, more specifically the boys' advent...
This article (after a brief introduction by Mark F. Weimer of Syracuse University) first appeared in...
Discusses and analyzes Robert Louis Stevenson\u27s use of the narrator\u27s voice in his short, unfi...
The six years Robert Louis Stevenson spent in the Pacific region offer a particularly stark contrast...
This thesis has two primary functions. Firstly, it seeks to challenge the prevailing critical under-...
Robert Louis Stevenson, who is well known for Treasure Island (1883) and Strange Case of Dr Jekyll a...
A general discussion of Robert Louis Stevenson\u27s encounters with Pacific island cultures, which t...
In his own time, Robert Louis Stevenson was admired as a careful technician of language, a stylist t...
This thesis seeks to place Robert Louis Stevenson as an important contributor to the emergence of Mo...
Robert Louis Stevenson continues to enjoy popular fame for his adventure tales, Treasure Island and ...
One rainy day in the summer of 1881, Robert Louis Stevenson entertained his stepson by sketching out...
This essay examines the depictions of colonial spaces and the failure of imperial endeavours in Robe...
This thesis explores Robert Louis Stevenson’s re-imagining of adventure narrative through the develo...
With Treasure Island, and its theoretical companion pieces “A Gossip on Romance” and “A Humble Remon...
Stevenson first entered fiction in the romantic novel of action, more specifically the boys' advent...
This article (after a brief introduction by Mark F. Weimer of Syracuse University) first appeared in...
Discusses and analyzes Robert Louis Stevenson\u27s use of the narrator\u27s voice in his short, unfi...
The six years Robert Louis Stevenson spent in the Pacific region offer a particularly stark contrast...
This thesis has two primary functions. Firstly, it seeks to challenge the prevailing critical under-...
Robert Louis Stevenson, who is well known for Treasure Island (1883) and Strange Case of Dr Jekyll a...
A general discussion of Robert Louis Stevenson\u27s encounters with Pacific island cultures, which t...
In his own time, Robert Louis Stevenson was admired as a careful technician of language, a stylist t...
This thesis seeks to place Robert Louis Stevenson as an important contributor to the emergence of Mo...
Robert Louis Stevenson continues to enjoy popular fame for his adventure tales, Treasure Island and ...
One rainy day in the summer of 1881, Robert Louis Stevenson entertained his stepson by sketching out...