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Title Centennial essays on Joseph Conrad's Chance / edited by Allan H. Simmons, Susan Jones
Published Leiden ; Boston : Brill Rodopi, [2016]
©2016

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Description 1 online resource (viii, 180 pages)
Series Conrad studies, 1872-1737 ; volume 9
Conrad studies ; 9. 1872-1737
Contents Preliminary Material / Allan H. Simmons and Susan Jones -- "The shore gang": Chance and the Ethics of Work / Andrew Glazzard -- Rortyian Contingency and Ethnocentrism in Chance / Jay Parker -- Speech, Affect, and Intervention in Chance / Anne Enderwitz -- Marlow, Socrates, and an Ancient Quarrel in Chance / Debra Romanick Baldwin -- Chance and Its Intertextualities / Ewa Kujawska-Lis -- The "girl-novel": Chance and Woolf's The Voyage Out / E.H. Wright -- "Fine-weather books": Representations of Readers and Reading in Chance / Helen Chambers -- From Incapable "Angel in the House" to Invincible "New Woman" in Marlovian Narratives: Representing Womanhood in "Heart of Darkness" and Chance / Pei-Wen Clio Kao -- "Let that Marlow talk": Chance and the Narrative Problem of Marlow / John G. Peters -- Chance: Conrad's A Portrait of a Feminist / Yumiko Iwashimizu -- Ships in the Night: Intimacy, Narration, and the Endless Near Misses of Chance / Mark Deggan -- Contributors / Allan H. Simmons and Susan Jones
Summary When Joseph Conrad's novel Chance appeared in serial form in the New York Herald in 1912 and in book form in 1914 it established the author's financial security for the first time. Following years of struggle to reach a wide audience for his fiction, Conrad benefitted from the American marketing of this novel for the women readers of romance. Aggressive advertising promoted the writer's new focus on a female protagonist and Conrad's division of the story's location between land and sea. The novel proved popular and lucrative. Yet in spite of its economic success, Chance remains one of Conrad's less well-known narratives. This fresh new collection of essays from both young and established scholars opens up a lively critical debate taking Chance beyond the status of best-selling romance. In a striking re-evaluation of the novel these writers examine Chance 's innovative narrative strategies, its up-to-the-minute commentary on female politics, contemporary ethics, as well as its antecedents in classical debate and the significance of Conrad's last use of his seaman narrator Marlow
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references
Notes Online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed November 28, 2018)
Subject Conrad, Joseph, 1857-1924. Chance
SUBJECT Chance (Conrad, Joseph) fast
Subject LITERARY CRITICISM -- European -- English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh.
Form Electronic book
Author Simmons, Allan, 1955- editor.
Jones, Susan, 1952- editor.
ISBN 9789004308992
9004308997
9789004308978
9004308970