Russia Revisited in Conrad’s Under Western Eyes
Yang Yu-Miao
Abstract
Under Western Eyes is often regarded as one of Conrad’s political novels, as it deals with the issues of autocracy, democracy and revolution in Tsarist Russia at the turn of the twentieth century. Indeed, set in the autocratic state of Russia and overtly political, Conrad cracks open superficial perceptions of what “autocratic state” may imply and what a political novel may mean by digging deep into the personal and psychological struggles of its protagonist, Razumov. Razumov’s personal tragedy, viewed in this regard, carries the weight of Russia; his story encapsulates “things Russia”. Seeing Razumov’s catastrophic end in Under Western Eyes as the verdict Conrad delivered on “things Russia”, this paper seeks to examine the difficulties Russia confronting in finding its identity when it is challenged with the democratic ideal and economic prosperity embraced by Western Europe.
Keywords
Conrad, Russia, Political Novel
References
Berthoud, J. (1978). Joseph Conrad: The Major Phase. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 173-4.
Bohlmann, O. (1991). Conrad’s Existentialism. London: Macmillan.
Conrad, J. (1989). Under Western Eyes. London: Penguin.
Dowden, W. (1970). Joseph Conrad: The Imaged Style. Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press.
Najder, Z. (1997). Conrad in perspective: Essays on Art and Fidelity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Roussell, R. (1971). The Metaphysics of Darkness: A Study in the Unity and Development of Conrad’s fiction. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press.
Tanner, T. (1981). Heart of Darkness, Nostromo and Under Western Eyes. London: Macmillan, 172-3.
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