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Palgrave Macmillan
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Conrad's Reading

Space, Time, Networks

  • Book
  • © 2018

Overview

  • Is the first study to make comprehensive, systematic and critical use of the rich seams of recorded evidence of reading to be found in Conrad’s Collected Letters
  • Offers an innovative examination of Conrad’s maritime reading, using an original multidimensional investigative approach
  • Offers the first comprehensive account of Conrad’s rich and varied fictional depictions of readers and reading, through close analysis of the ‘Marlow’ fiction, ‘Youth’ (1898) ‘Heart of Darkness’ (1899), Lord Jim (1900) and Chance (1914), and several other works
  • Is the first examination of Conrad’s most important longstanding male literary friendships seen through the perspective of shared reading of work in progress, periodicals and published books
  • Adds significantly to the study of Conrad and gender by further examining Conrad’s literary relationships with several literate and multilingual women

Part of the book series: New Directions in Book History (NDBH)

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Table of contents (7 chapters)

Keywords

About this book

This book aligns concepts and methods from book history with new literary research on a globally studied writer. An innovative three-part approach, combining close reading the evidence of reading, scrutiny of international book distribution circuits, and of Conrad's many fictional representations of reading, illuminates his childhood, maritime and later shore-based reading. After an overview of the empirical evidence of Conrad's reading, his sparsely documented twenty years reading at sea and in port is reconstructed. An examination the reading practices of his famous narrator Marlow then serves to link Conrad's own maritime and shore-based reading. Conrad's subsequent networked reading, shared with his closest male friends, and with literate multilingual women, is examined within the context of Edwardian reading practices. His fictional representations of reading and material texts are highlighted throughout, including genre trends, periodical reading, reading spaces and their lighting, and the use of reading as therapy. The book should appeal both to Conrad scholars and to historians of reading.

Reviews

“With Conrad’s Reading: Space, Time, Networks, Helen Chambers makes a very valuable contribution to this field. … Chambers paints an interesting, rich, and variegated picture of Conrad’s reading. … Richly researched, Conrad’s Reading will not only be of interest to Conrad scholars.” (Wim Van Mierlo, Library & Information History, Vol. 35 (1), 2019)

Authors and Affiliations

  • Open University, Milton Keynes, United Kingdom

    Helen Chambers

About the author

Helen Chambers is an Honorary Associate in English at The Open University, UK. As well as specialist medical qualifications she has a recent (2014) PhD in Literature and has published on Conrad and Ford Madox Ford. Based in France, she is a member of the History of the Book and Reading Research Collaboration (HOBAR) at the Open University and an active contributor and editor for the Reading Experience Database (UKRED).

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