This essay examines the depictions of colonial spaces and the failure of imperial endeavours in Robert Louis Stevenson’s 1883 novel Treasure Island. By combining several theoretical approaches, the aim is to foreground the ways in which Stevenson subverts the norms of imperial romance and creates an adventure story that calls into question the very premise of its genre
The thesis is split into two parts. The first part investigates the production, reception, and recon...
International audienceThis article seeks to analyse in what ways the desert island can be considered...
The article analyses the imbalanced power-relations between the native inhabitants and the British c...
This essay examines the depictions of colonial spaces and the failure of imperial endeavours in Robe...
With Treasure Island, and its theoretical companion pieces “A Gossip on Romance” and “A Humble Remon...
The purpose of this article is twofold: first, it will aim to demonstrate that Stevenson's Treasure ...
This essay considers the relationship between Robert Louis Stevenson’s well-loved adventure classic ...
This thesis explores Robert Louis Stevenson’s re-imagining of adventure narrative through the develo...
A general discussion of Robert Louis Stevenson\u27s encounters with Pacific island cultures, which t...
This thesis has two primary functions. Firstly, it seeks to challenge the prevailing critical under-...
Although Edinburgh-born author Robert Louis Stevenson is best known as a writer of nineteenth-centur...
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...
The six years Robert Louis Stevenson spent in the Pacific region offer a particularly stark contrast...
One rainy day in the summer of 1881, Robert Louis Stevenson entertained his stepson by sketching out...
The thesis is split into two parts. The first part investigates the production, reception, and recon...
International audienceThis article seeks to analyse in what ways the desert island can be considered...
The article analyses the imbalanced power-relations between the native inhabitants and the British c...
This essay examines the depictions of colonial spaces and the failure of imperial endeavours in Robe...
With Treasure Island, and its theoretical companion pieces “A Gossip on Romance” and “A Humble Remon...
The purpose of this article is twofold: first, it will aim to demonstrate that Stevenson's Treasure ...
This essay considers the relationship between Robert Louis Stevenson’s well-loved adventure classic ...
This thesis explores Robert Louis Stevenson’s re-imagining of adventure narrative through the develo...
A general discussion of Robert Louis Stevenson\u27s encounters with Pacific island cultures, which t...
This thesis has two primary functions. Firstly, it seeks to challenge the prevailing critical under-...
Although Edinburgh-born author Robert Louis Stevenson is best known as a writer of nineteenth-centur...
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...
The six years Robert Louis Stevenson spent in the Pacific region offer a particularly stark contrast...
One rainy day in the summer of 1881, Robert Louis Stevenson entertained his stepson by sketching out...
The thesis is split into two parts. The first part investigates the production, reception, and recon...
International audienceThis article seeks to analyse in what ways the desert island can be considered...
The article analyses the imbalanced power-relations between the native inhabitants and the British c...