
Enjoy fast, free delivery, exclusive deals, and award-winning movies & TV shows with Prime
Try Prime
and start saving today with fast, free delivery
Amazon Prime includes:
Fast, FREE Delivery is available to Prime members. To join, select "Try Amazon Prime and start saving today with Fast, FREE Delivery" below the Add to Cart button.
Amazon Prime members enjoy:- Cardmembers earn 5% Back at Amazon.com with a Prime Credit Card.
- Unlimited Free Two-Day Delivery
- Streaming of thousands of movies and TV shows with limited ads on Prime Video.
- A Kindle book to borrow for free each month - with no due dates
- Listen to over 2 million songs and hundreds of playlists
- Unlimited photo storage with anywhere access
Important: Your credit card will NOT be charged when you start your free trial or if you cancel during the trial period. If you're happy with Amazon Prime, do nothing. At the end of the free trial, your membership will automatically upgrade to a monthly membership.
Buy new:
-39% $14.75$14.75
Ships from: Amazon.com Sold by: Amazon.com
Save with Used - Good
$13.27$13.27
Ships from: Amazon Sold by: Rye Berry Books

Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
The Dawn Watch: Joseph Conrad in a Global World Paperback – November 6, 2018
Purchase options and add-ons
Winner of the 2018 Cundill History Prize
A New York Times Book Review Notable Book of 2017
One of the New York Times 100 Notable Books of 2017
A visionary exploration of the life and times of Joseph Conrad, his turbulent age of globalization and our own, from one of the most exciting young historians writing today
Migration, terrorism, the tensions between global capitalism and nationalism, and a communications revolution: these forces shaped Joseph Conrad’s destiny at the dawn of the twentieth century. In this brilliant new interpretation of one of the great voices in modern literature, Maya Jasanoff reveals Conrad as a prophet of globalization. As an immigrant from Poland to England, and in travels from Malaya to Congo to the Caribbean, Conrad navigated an interconnected world, and captured it in a literary oeuvre of extraordinary depth. His life story delivers a history of globalization from the inside out, and reflects powerfully on the aspirations and challenges of the modern world.
Joseph Conrad was born Józef Teodor Konrad Korzeniowski in 1857, to Polish parents in the Russian Empire. At sixteen he left the landlocked heart of Europe to become a sailor, and for the next twenty years travelled the world’s oceans before settling permanently in England as an author. He saw the surging, competitive "new imperialism" that planted a flag in almost every populated part of the globe. He got a close look, too, at the places “beyond the end of telegraph cables and mail-boat lines,” and the hypocrisy of the west’s most cherished ideals.
In a compelling blend of history, biography, and travelogue, Maya Jasanoff follows Conrad’s routes and the stories of his four greatest works—The Secret Agent, Lord Jim, Heart of Darkness, and Nostromo. Genre-bending, intellectually thrilling, and deeply humane, The Dawn Watch embarks on a spell-binding expedition into the dark heart of Conrad’s world—and through it to our own.
- Print length400 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateNovember 6, 2018
- Dimensions5.5 x 0.91 x 8.25 inches
- ISBN-100143111043
- ISBN-13978-0143111047
Book recommendations, author interviews, editors' picks, and more. Read it now.
Frequently bought together

Customers who viewed this item also viewed
Editorial Reviews
Review
“Enlightening, compassionate, superb” —John Le Carré
“Gracefully written . . . the book is a great pleasure to read, for Jasanoff is driven to understand the world that shaped a writer she loves.” — Adam Hochschild, Foreign Affairs
“Fascinating…[Conrad’s] art, which he defined as the capacity to make readers hear, feel and see, as able to capture the contradictions within empires and the resistance to them. This is the Conrad who comes alive in Jasanoff’s masterful study. The Dawn Watch will become a creative companion to all students of his work. It has made me want to re-establish connections with the Conrad whose written sentences once inspired in me the same joy as a musical phrase.” —Ngugi wa Thiong’o, The New York Times Book Review
“Terrific…Weaving together biography, history, literature and her own travels, this fascinating, beautifully written work takes one of those literary giants frequently written off these days as a dead white male and reveals how he inhabited and grappled with a world startlingly like our own…[Jasanoff] explains why it’s important that we grapple with figures like Conrad even if we don’t share their values. History is like therapy for the present, she writes. It makes us talk about its parents. She’s right as well as witty. And reading The Dawn Watch, we see how we are in many ways Conrad’s children. Even if you hated ‘Lord Jim’ in high school, this book will make you want to pick it up again.” — John Powers, NPR
“Brilliant…Jasanoff is an insightful and imaginative historian…The book comes in the form of a biography of Joseph Conrad, but in fact through Conrad she tells the story of a whole phase in world history…Boundless curiosity is also an attribute of Maya Jasanoff...[Her] travels have given her an empathy and an understanding for Conrad, and also for the victims of imperialism, that breathe on every page of this magnificent book…This is the best book on Conrad since [Ian] Watt’s. Maya Jasanoff has given us a Conrad for the 21st century.” —Los Angeles Review of Books
“Jasanoff is a splendid storyteller and stylist.” —San Francisco Chronicle
“A rewarding, richly textured read, sprawling in its reach and full of surprising cross-connections… Jasanoff…shares with her subject the knack of capturing human experience in poetic fistfuls of language, although it’s sometimes hard to know where Conrad’s magic stops and her own starts.” —The American Scholar
“With wit, nuance, and roving insight, Harvard historian Maya Jasanoff’s The Dawn Watch: Joseph Conrad in a Global World maps the massively influential and controversial author’s life and work, finding that the themes of his time—dislocation and connection, immigration and xenophobia, power and powerlessness—uncannily mirror our own.” —Megan O’Grady, Vogue.com’s 10 Best Books of 2017
“[A] brilliant study . . . The Dawn Watch will win prizes, and if it doesn’t, there is something wrong with the prizes.” —The Guardian
“[Jasanoff] Skillfully integrates details of Conrad’s life and accounts of his four greatest works, linking the challenges and forces that lie behind and within the novels to those of the 21st century…A powerful encouragement to read his books.” —The Economist
“This is an unobtrusively skillful, subtle, clear-eyed book, beautifully narrated…It is Jasanoff’s warmth towards her subject that comes through.” —Financial Times
“[Conrad’s] life story has been told many times, but Maya Jasanoff’s stands out for its vivid and imaginative writing…she provides rich background details on multiple topics…her attempts to reveal the hidden springs of Conrad’s fiction are often perceptive.” —Sunday Times (UK)
“Excellent—an engrossing, heartfelt exploration of the ragged frontier between public history, private experience, and imagination, from which the greatest literature is drawn. As Jasanoff charts the genesis of Conrad's most enduring novels of moral and political corruption, she makes us see his century-old dark vision of modernity as a sort of prophecy of our times.” —Philip Gourevitch
“A great biography of Conrad for our times could never be just a biography of Conrad. The Dawn Watch is a scholarly trip to the birthplace of the books themselves, and an extraordinary meditation on Conrad's place in our consciousness. Jasanoff is erudite, passionate and wise: she has it all.” —Juan Gabriel Vásquez
“So well written…This is a biographer who has done her homework and her legwork for a book that creates a Conrad for our time. Enjoy it—how rarely can one say that about a work of scholarship.” —The Times (UK)
“Deftly melding biographical narration, historical analysis, and literary explication, Jasanoff lets readers glimpse in Conrad’s fiction the fate of vulnerable individuals who ventured too far in a world rapidly losing its boundaries. And as one who—despite the cost and the danger—has retraced many of Conrad’s journeys, Jasanoff compellingly asserts the novelist’s continuing relevance as an interpreter of our (post)modern geopolitical and cultural perplexities.” —Booklist (starred review)
“An absorbing biography melds history and literary analysis… In rich detail, Jasanoff skillfully contextualizes his work within ‘a chain of historical events’ that led to profound social and political change…An insightful perspective on Conrad's life and turbulent times.”—Kirkus
“The Dawn Watch takes the reader seamlessly through Joseph Conrad's extraordinary life and voyages, showing us that our globalized world was fundamentally shaped in his lifetime a century ago—and that his pen still illuminates its beating heart. This is a wonder of a book that merges vivid travel, scholarly biography, and sharply observed history. Everyone searching for an understanding of our world today and the voice of one of the twentieth century's most evocative writers should set sail with Maya Jasanoff.” —Admiral James Stavridis, USN (Ret.)
“A book as beautiful as it is learned. Teeming with new discoveries, Jasanoff’s Dawn Watch is an astonishing tour of Conrad’s world, from Kraków to Kinshasha, from London to Singapore. To read it is to be a stowaway in the hull of a ship sailing from Conrad’s times to our own, as swift as the wind.” —Jill Lepore
“In Dawn Watch, Maya Jasanoff has fashioned a singular craft for exploring the rapids and crosscurrents of a newly globalized era. The journey is intellectually exhilarating, and brings us to a richer understanding not only of Conrad’s world but our own.” —Kwame Anthony Appiah
"Maya Jasanoff’s masterpiece....one of the most important books on colonialism to be written in our time, and by one of our most brilliant young historians." —William Dalrymple, The Guardian
“Like Sven Lindqvist’s “Exterminate all the Brutes,” The Dawn Watch lifts Conrad out of the “great tradition” of lit-crit to attempt something larger and more ambitious: demonstrating that his world is ours – and vice-versa. Maya Jasanoff is an eloquent historian and an erudite storyteller; she almost persuaded me to re-read Nostromo.” —Geoff Dyer
“Jasanoff has done her research on sea and land as well as in the archives, and her book is often thrilling to read as it travels the world with Conrad. An admirable and profoundly meditated biography, worthy of its subject.” —Claire Tomalin
“A guided tour of the underside of empire, led by the fiction of Joseph Conrad and the erudition of Maya Jasanoff, The Dawn Watch is history, biography, and adventure story. Filled with fresh insights and information, it offers some timely lessons about the DNA of ‘globalization.’” —Louis Menand
“Enthralling – a major achievement, an unforgettable voyage, an historic circumnavigation of Conrad’s whole life. I loved the big historical and intellectual panorama, Conrad sailing through the stormy history of maritime globalization and colonization, freshly framed, wonderfully researched and often angrily argued too. The whole book is constantly pierced by the most vivid and memorable close-ups, shafts of biographical sunlight through those dark historical storm-clouds. The section on Heart of Darkness, seems to me an absolute masterpiece. Historical narrative, literary analysis and complex post-colonial argument combined in the most thrilling way.” —Richard Holmes
“Written with all the immediacy of a fast-moving novel, yet also with all the acuity and scholarship one would expect from one of the most brilliant historians of her generation, The Dawn Watch gives us superb new insights into the mind and life of one of the greatest writers in the English tongue. The issues of which Joseph Conrad wrote with such penetrating prescience a century ago – terrorism, racism, interventionism, alienation – are the ones we worry about today, indeed perhaps more so now than at any time since he laid down his pen. This is the definitive biography, but also a fine work of literature in itself.” —Professor Andrew Roberts, Lehrman Distinguished Lecturer at the New-York Historical Society
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Penguin Publishing Group; Reprint edition (November 6, 2018)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 400 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0143111043
- ISBN-13 : 978-0143111047
- Item Weight : 11.2 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.5 x 0.91 x 8.25 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #926,114 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #157 in Victorian Literary Criticism (Books)
- #4,100 in Traveler & Explorer Biographies
- #4,629 in Author Biographies
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Discover more of the author’s books, see similar authors, read book recommendations and more.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers praise the book's engaging prose and how it weaves together stories from Conrad's life, making it as captivating as the novelist's stories. The biography is well-written and customers find it worth the price. They appreciate its ease of use, with one customer noting the author's effortless mastery of sources.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Select to learn more
Customers praise the writing quality of the book, noting its excellent engaging prose and well-written history, with one customer highlighting how the author skillfully weaves together personal and historical elements.
"...She also nicely contextualizes and summarizes Conrad’s book, with special panache. There are no boring moments in this tale of a most unusual writer...." Read more
"...I really enjoyed this book, but the misreading of Nostromo is a cause for wonderment. Thus I give it a provisional 4 stars." Read more
"...Conrad, and while The Dawn Watch is an introduction, I found it both enjoyable and very well-worth it. Heartily recommended." Read more
"...The book is recommended to anyone with an interest in Conrad...." Read more
Customers praise this biography for weaving together stories from Conrad's life, making it as captivating as his novels, with one customer noting how it brings history and biography to life.
"...want to emphasize is the excitement of this book – how it makes history and biography glow through its sprightly writing style, without for a moment..." Read more
"...is a highly readable, engaging, and accurate introduction to, and biography of, Conrad. Outstanding, all around...." Read more
"This book is offers a biography of Joseph Conrad, as well as a portrait of the colonial age in which he lived...." Read more
"I loved this book. It's a great contextual biography...." Read more
Customers find the book to be a great piece.
"...The Dawn Watch is an introduction, I found it both enjoyable and very well-worth it. Heartily recommended." Read more
"I was attracted to this book by the author's great piece in the New York Times about retracing Joseph Conrad's travels into "The Heart of..." Read more
"...I pre-ordered mine at a premium. Still the enjoyment value was worth the higher cost. Buy it while you can!" Read more
"Really good, especially if you have any interest in Joseph Conrad and his works...." Read more
Customers find the book easy to use, with one review noting its effortless mastery of sources and another describing it as an accurate introduction.
"This is a highly readable, engaging, and accurate introduction to, and biography of, Conrad. Outstanding, all around...." Read more
"...a fine example of the best new biographies - ferocious but effortless mastery of sources highlighting a whole person, with special attention to very..." Read more
"EASY-BREEZY BEGINNERS' GUIDE..." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews. Please reload the page.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 12, 2017This book takes readers on a wonderful journey through the jagged life of Joseph Conrad. He lived in and captured exciting, troubled times – and Jasanoff depicts him with complexity and depth. Jasanoff is on his trail, placing him within the context of national rivalries, trade routes, colonialism, and literary tastes. As this suggests, her range is wide and her knowledge is deep. She also nicely contextualizes and summarizes Conrad’s book, with special panache. There are no boring moments in this tale of a most unusual writer. Anyone who has ever read Conrad’s “The Heart of Darkness” will gain greater insight into the work. There is an air of the tragic that infuses this book, and it was actually refreshing. The background on Conrad’s family (his wildly nationalistic father and his stoutly pragmatic uncle) helps the readers to understand Conrad’s background and the push and pull aspects of his life. But what I want to emphasize is the excitement of this book – how it makes history and biography glow through its sprightly writing style, without for a moment jettisoning excellent scholarship. Here are a couple of particularly lovely sentences: “Pine-scented summer veered into dank, frost-nipped autumn.” Or, a page later, “Even when you can trace the fault lines, there’s no knowing where or when an earthquake will strike.” Yes, sometimes an “off” sentence sounds, “Fog slung moist arms around the town’s shoulders.” But the next sentence redeems: “Wet, black forest scratched its back.” Jasanoff has traveled down the Congo and other Conradian places, all the better to give you a sense of what he may have experienced and seen (albeit with an eye to how things have changed) and how this author has a restless and insatiable appetite for experience, akin to Conrad’s.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 26, 2017I re-read Conrad's Nostromo after finishing The Dawn Watch, then I compared my reading of Nostromo with Nasanoff's and found two discrepancies. In her telling of the complicated plot, Nostromo and Decoud set off with the intention of burying the silver shipment on the Great Isabel island, but this is incorrect: their boat carrying the silver collides with a larger vessel and ends up on the Great Isabel as a consequence of this accident. Even more problematic is her assertion that Nostromo ends up dead because he was deceiving the lightkeeper Giorgio about his romantic intentions, as a ruse to access the buried silver. Nostromos is not putting on a sham about his love, it's the object of his love - the younger rather than the older daughter - that is the secret being kept from Giorgio. He's not killed in the act of retrieving the silver; he's killed out of a passionate desire to see the woman he discovers he's madly in love with.
I really enjoyed this book, but the misreading of Nostromo is a cause for wonderment. Thus I give it a provisional 4 stars.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 5, 2023This is a highly readable, engaging, and accurate introduction to, and biography of, Conrad. Outstanding, all around. It's my basic "go to" recommendation for those looking for such a resource (far, far preferable to the Jefferey Meyers bio, by the way--which is, at times, sensationalistic and unreliable).
Jasanoff also provides a tactful, judicious--but also much needed--balance to the all-too-popular dismissals of Conrad following Chinua Achebe's notorious crusade against Conrad and his work.
I'm well read in both Conrad and writings about Conrad, and while The Dawn Watch is an introduction, I found it both enjoyable and very well-worth it. Heartily recommended.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 6, 2018This book is offers a biography of Joseph Conrad, as well as a portrait of the colonial age in which he lived. The author, Maya Jasanoff, shows how Conrad's life anticipated the modern age, on issues such as immigration, globalization, terrorism and human rights.
Much of the book, as much of the recent criticism of Conrad, focuses on his short novel, Heart of Darkness. Jasanoff points out how Belgium was able to use its neutral position in Europe to promote advancing civilization as a means of imperialism.
The issue, to Conrad, was not that savages were inhuman. It was that any human could become savage. The book in some ways is a corrective to the PC charge of racism that have been leveled at Conrad since the 70s by Chinua Achebe and others.
The book is recommended to anyone with an interest in Conrad. I disagree with some reviewers on this site who say the ideal reader is a someone with little or no familiarity with Conrad. I enjoyed re acquainting myself with Conrad's works. And I may take another stab at Nostromo, which has previously eluded me.
This is another of Jasanoff's books, like Liberty's Exiles, which features topics that transcend international borders.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 18, 2020I loved this book. It's a great contextual biography. I must admit that I've read little of Conrad's work (only Heart of Darkness and The Secret Sharer) but find him interesting, in that way that you sometimes find yourself drawn to historical persons. By that I mean, I am pulled in by his intellect and spirit, while at the same time repulsed by what would be called racism and antisemitism today. It's one of those things one must wrestle with when exploring our shared history- how to see the good in spite of the bad, in an individual (or country.) I suppose it's different for everyone. In today's climate, it's easy to reject the past without actually confronting it, which I believe is wrongheaded and stunts or growth as people and as a society. I suppose it's trite to say, but there are no easy answers.
Top reviews from other countries
-
H. SchneiderReviewed in Germany on January 22, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars Frühzeit der Globalisierung
Als der Pole Konrad Korzeniowski 1857 geboren wurde, existierte das Land seiner Eltern nicht als selbstständiger Staat. Sein Geburtsort lag im russischen Reich, heute in der Ukraine. Der Junge wanderte früh aus, nach Frankreich, dann England, und wurde Seemann. Er bereiste die Welt, fing an zu schreiben, wurde englischer Schriftsteller als Joseph Conrad. Für mich ein ganz Großer.
Die Autorin dieser unkonventionellen biographischen Studie ist amerikanische Geschichtsprofessorin, Spezialgebiet Britisches Empire, in Harvard.
Aus dem Vorwort kann man entnehmen, dass sie keine reine Schreibtischtäterin und Archivwühlerin ist. Offenbar ist sie ausgiebig in Vorbereitung gereist.
Das Buch ist keine hagiographische Übung. Es startet mit der Geschichte der Eltern. Ich finde dieses erste Kapitel unnötig lang, obgleich ein Verständnis des persönlichen Hintergrunds Conrads natürlich nötig ist.
Mit dem zweiten Kapitel in Frankreich wird es interessanter: wir sehen Conrad als fortdauernd unzuverlässige Quelle. Was er uns über sich selbst sagt, ist oft unbestätigt, wenn nicht widerlegt. Andererseits sind viele Elemente seiner Geschichten vermutlich autobiographisch geprägt.
Das erste London-Kapitel beschreibt und analysiert Conrad’s ‘Secret Agent’. Ein Blick in die neue Welt des internationalen Terrorismus. Die war getragen von Anarchisten und von antibritischen Iren und antirussischen Polen. Sie war ein internationales Phänomen, und London war das Zentrum. Eine Facette der beginnenden Globalisierung. (Ein zeitgenössischer Buchdeckel zeigte den einstürzenden Turm des Big Ben nach einem Terroranschlag.)
London gegen Ende des 19. Jahrhunderts gleicht in mancher Hinsicht dem Brexit-London. Immigranten werden als Problem wahrgenommen und daraus entstehen politische Veränderungen.
Conrad wurde ein britischer Seemann in der Zeit des Siegeszugs der Dampfschiffe und der weltweiten Dominanz Großbritanniens im Schiffsbau und in der Seeschifffahrt. Seine Erfahrungen sammelte er jedoch meist auf Segelschiffen, und obwohl er ein Kapitänspatent hatte, konnte er nur auf einer Fahrt die Kapitänsrolle erfüllen. Der Markt war übersättigt, weil durch die Dampfschiffe der Personalbedarf schrumpfte.
Seine Karriere zur See war nicht brillant, aber ergiebige Stoffquelle für den zukünftigen Schriftsteller. Ein großer Teil seiner praktischen Erfahrungen war auf Südostasien konzentriert, wo er sich meist an der Schnittstelle zwischen Europäern und Asiaten bewegte. Er sah die Welt europäisch und hatte nur begrenzt Einblick in lokale Gesellschaften und Denkweisen.
Sein einzige Anstellung in Afrika überschnitt sich mit seinen schriftstellerischen Anfängen: während er erlebte, was zum ‘Herz der Finsternis’ führte, seine Kongo-Episode, arbeitete er am Manuskript seines ersten Romans, ‘Almayers Wahn’. Darin begann er mit der Fiktionalisierung seiner asiatischen Erlebnisse.
Das Kongo-Kapitel ist sehr informativ. Die Autorin stellt die belgische Kolonialisierung in den Zusammenhang der breiteren fremden Beherrschungen des Kontinents, einschließlich der arabischen Einflüsse aus dem Osten des Kontinents. Unter den Fremden spielen König Leopold von Belgien und Henry Morton Stanley Schlüsselrollen.
Der Kongo wird eine Welt des Grauens, ein Zwangsarbeitsstaat im Namen der Abschaffung der Sklaverei. Unvorstellbare Grausamkeiten zum Wohle der Schatztruhe Leopolds.
Herz der Finsternis war nie mein bevorzugter Conrad-Text. Conrads Blick auf den Kongo war ambivalent. Er durchschaute den gierigen Sadismus der Kolonialherrn, aber er ekelte sich auch vor den ‘Wilden’. Jasanoff bestätigt im Grunde die Kritik an Conrad, die ihn des Rassismus beschuldigte. Kann man aber heutige Massstäbe an Autoren des späten 19. Jahrhunderts legen?
Deutlich mehr hat mir immer Conrads Amerikabuch bedeutet: Nostromo. Ein sehr komplexes Buch, bis zur Umständlichkeit gewunden, aber auch erstaunlich sicher in der Darstellung eines fiktiven Landes auf einem Kontinent, den Conrad nur aus Erzählungen und Lektüre kannte.
Interessanterweise war Conrad im amerikanischen Markt erfolgreicher als in seiner englischen Wahlheimat.
- Chakravarthi BharatiReviewed in India on October 5, 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars Best biography on Conrad
Absolutely a great buy....
-
recluseReviewed in Japan on July 21, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars 面白い。お勧めです
Joseph Conradという作家がいた。もともとはポーランド生まれで英国に帰化した人物だ。Heart of Darkness 「闇の奥」を書いた作家でもある。フランシス・コッポラの有名な映画「地獄の黙示録」の原作となった作品だ。この作品は過去に何度か読もうとしたのだが、とてもじゃないが僕の手におえる英語じゃないのだ。よくもこんな作品が英語を母国語しない人物が書けたものだ。脱線するが、conrad, henry james, john le carre, そしてnabokov、これらの作家は何度か挑戦するのだが、ほとんどの場合、いつもすぐ放り出してしまう。英語があまりにも難しいのだ。
最近、「Colonialism: A Moral Reckoning」という英国植民地主義を弁護した見事な作品を読んだのだが、そこでのテーマが植民地主義。「闇の奥」はコンゴというフランス植民地を題材とした作品だが、どうも怖くて手が出せない。というわけで、ワテのいつもの悪い癖が出てきた。作品自体に向かうのではなく、「作家の伝記を読めばいいのだ」、という安直なやり方だ。そこで思い出したのが、数年前にでたこの作品だ。
この作品は、conradの一生を辿りながら、その中で、主要な作品が紹介されていく。といっても文学の詳細なテキスト紹介に特化した作品ではない。著者は「闇の奥」の舞台でもあるコンゴにまで出かけて船で内陸まで移動し、conradの軌跡をたどっているのだ。というわけで、むしろ19世紀後半という時代をconradという人物を借りて描いた作品といっていいだろう。
conradは、ポーランドの地主階級の出だが、ポーランドという国自体が消滅していたため、両親を早く亡くし、フランスに出稼ぎに出て、船員としてのキャリアを始めた人物。彼の船員としての軌跡は、南米を別として、東南アジア、オーストラリア、アフリカ、そして大陸のブリュッセルにまで及んでいる。そして時代は、19世紀後半。欧米植民地拡大の最後の絶頂期。というわけで、この副題「joseph conrad in a global world」となるのだ。
著者は、この19世紀後半をglobalisationの時代と捉えている。ポーランドでの民族主義は挫折したにせよ、船、特に帆船に変わる蒸気船と海底ケーブルというテクノロジーの発達により世界は急速に小さくなる。奴隷売買は禁止されたにせよ、貿易と投資により多国籍企業により資本主義は世界中に広がる。そしてアナーキストによるテロリズムが世間をにぎわせる一方で、「文明の使命と進歩」という掛け声がその資本主義の全世界的な展開を正当化した時代だ。その時代を反映する作品が多数conradの作品のレパートリーを占めているのだ。そういう意味では、conradも時代を反映した作家なのだ。
難解な「闇の奥」に自伝を通して触れるというワテの安直な狙いに関しては、その目的はあまり達成されなかった。たしかに、それなりのスペースは「闇の奥」にさかれているのだが、この作品の紹介と引用は断片的であり、むしろその後の作品「nostromo」の創作プロセスの描写がこの作品の主眼だろうか。この作品は、作成時期にちょうどパナマ運河の建設をめぐるアメリカとコロンビアの紛争が持ち上がり、この現実の進展が作品の創作とその広がりに大きく影響を与えているというのだ。そうここではアメリカの資本主義がイギリスに変わり前面に登場してくるのだ。
文体はわかり易い英語で書かれ、その筆致もポスコロの特徴でもある一方的で断罪的な物言いや議論の誇張は本書には見られない。そういう意味ではお勧めの作品。ただ、まだconradの作品に立ち向かう勇気はまだ起きないな。
-
gilberto gabrielliReviewed in Italy on December 27, 2018
5.0 out of 5 stars Per chi ama Conrad come una guida all’avventura viaggiante e come una fonte di ispirazione per le avventure della mente , questa e’ una lettura importante per la quantità di notizie, organizzazione del percorso letterario e per l’ approfondimento delle fonti. Per chi ha il tempo di fermare l’attenzione sui particolari biografici di uno scrittore fra i più amati ma spesso solo percepiti e non studiati.L’uso della lingua inglese e molto ricercato ( fusione fra inglese e cd americano molto interessante)Chi lo tradurrà in italiano?
Come detto sopra il valore dell’opera sta proprio nel lavor certosino di ricostruzione della vita con l’opera “accanto” che scorrono assieme. Un po’ anche con quella dell’autrice: una ottima ricercatrice
- Amazon CustomerReviewed in the United Kingdom on December 15, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars A wise and illuminating achievement
Let's begin by agreeing with the author that the late 19th century isn't the 21st century but still the resonances, back and forth, from one to the other, are intriguing. The global reach of greedy commercial elites, the struggle between competing ideologies and religions, technological advance and disruption and the influence or not of political systems and politicians are as relevant now, for us, as they were then, for Conrad.
And at the centre of Conrad's life, at the centre of the UK's political life in 2017, the interplay between Europe and the UK, between nationalism and democracy, and between social and economic protectionism and immigration.
The author has balanced all this whilst not overworking the parallels. She has told a compelling story of Conrad's life and work with subtlety and finesse. It would have been so easy for her to fall into stereotypical responses to her preparation for her journey to and down the river Congo. She has used that journey as her narrative frame in a telling and subtle way.
We live in the 21st century. The heart of Conrad's fiction centres on the late 19th century. We need to learn from his insights.
The author is judicious in pointing out that Conrad was also a writer of his time, that some of his views are not the views of the informed and fair minded today. She is insightful in the way she presents this.
So faced today with globalisation against local interests, capitalism against the common good, nationalism against democracy and ethnic diversity and richness against prejudice about immigration we could all benefit from Conrad's insights. Heart of Darkness, for me the summit of his fiction, is flawed, stereotypically racist and very much a product of its times but it delivers colossal returns for close attention. Maya Jasanoff impresses here, particularly her reading of the story's narrative framing by Conrad and Marlowe.
Her use of her own journey to and down the Congo river, and her preparation for it, are used with subtlety. They could so easily have been overwrought.
If she doesn't win every biographical, historical and critical prize going then there's something amiss.
I thoroughly recommend this book.