"What a chance missed! My God! What a chance missed"Joseph Conrad, Lord Jim (1900)Jim's lament has intriguing implications for issues of chance and control in literature, perhaps also for literary history, and certainly for the act of reading itself. This article will explore such implications, from the obivous 'moral identity' of Jim himself to the complex way in which imagination incessantly and ingeniously strives to impose its orders and controls on experience
Some critics say that after Chance, Conrad\u27s imagination and mental power gradually withered and ...
Paradox has always been a central topic in the study of Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness (1899). In...
Includes bibliographical references (page 38)Joseph Conrad's works have been studied extensively\ud ...
"What a chance missed! My God! What a chance missed"Joseph Conrad, Lord Jim (1900)Jim's lament has i...
Lord Jim is an attempt by Joseph Conrad to contemplate on the failure of the dreams of a man whose r...
The aim of this paper is to examine the impact that emotions exert on the process of acquisition of ...
Lord Jim by Joseph Conrad highlights the struggle of the narrator, Marlow and the unfavourable...
Edward Said’s dissertation-turned-monograph Joseph Conrad and the Fiction of Autobiography (1966) wa...
This is a journal article in a special edited edition of Conradiana. It discusses Joseph Conrad's pu...
Tragedy and comedy are, in Conrad's phrase, "but a matter of the visual angle." Tragedy focusses on...
Preceding his literary career, Conrad spent twenty years at sea, acquiring from this experience a co...
Heart of Darkness, Chance, and Lord Jim can be described as philosophical works if considered in lig...
This dissertation aims to explore the ways in which Joseph Conrad’s autobiographical memory and writ...
In this article, I argue that Joseph Conrad’s revision of popular maritime fiction in The Nigger of ...
Conrad begins his volume of reminiscences, A Personal Record, by recalling how he wrote the tenth ch...
Some critics say that after Chance, Conrad\u27s imagination and mental power gradually withered and ...
Paradox has always been a central topic in the study of Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness (1899). In...
Includes bibliographical references (page 38)Joseph Conrad's works have been studied extensively\ud ...
"What a chance missed! My God! What a chance missed"Joseph Conrad, Lord Jim (1900)Jim's lament has i...
Lord Jim is an attempt by Joseph Conrad to contemplate on the failure of the dreams of a man whose r...
The aim of this paper is to examine the impact that emotions exert on the process of acquisition of ...
Lord Jim by Joseph Conrad highlights the struggle of the narrator, Marlow and the unfavourable...
Edward Said’s dissertation-turned-monograph Joseph Conrad and the Fiction of Autobiography (1966) wa...
This is a journal article in a special edited edition of Conradiana. It discusses Joseph Conrad's pu...
Tragedy and comedy are, in Conrad's phrase, "but a matter of the visual angle." Tragedy focusses on...
Preceding his literary career, Conrad spent twenty years at sea, acquiring from this experience a co...
Heart of Darkness, Chance, and Lord Jim can be described as philosophical works if considered in lig...
This dissertation aims to explore the ways in which Joseph Conrad’s autobiographical memory and writ...
In this article, I argue that Joseph Conrad’s revision of popular maritime fiction in The Nigger of ...
Conrad begins his volume of reminiscences, A Personal Record, by recalling how he wrote the tenth ch...
Some critics say that after Chance, Conrad\u27s imagination and mental power gradually withered and ...
Paradox has always been a central topic in the study of Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness (1899). In...
Includes bibliographical references (page 38)Joseph Conrad's works have been studied extensively\ud ...