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Joseph Conrad : situating identity in a postcolonial space / H. Sewlall

This thesis is premised on the notion, drawn mainly from a postcolonial
perspective (which is subsumed under the poststructuralist as well as the
postmodern), that Conrad's early writing reflects his abiding concern with how people
construct their identities vis-a-vis the other/Other in contact zones on the periphery
of empire far from the reach of social, racial and national identities that sustain them
at home.
It sets out to explore the problematic of race, culture, gender and identity in a
selection of the writer's early works set mainly, but not exclusively, in the East, using
the theoretical perspective of postcoloniality as a point of entry, nuanced by the
configurations of spatiality which are factored into discourses about the other/Other.
Predicated mainly on the theoretical constructs about culture and identity espoused
by Homi Bhabha, Edward Said and Stuart Hall, this study proposes the idea of an in between
"third space" for the interrogation of identity in Conrad's work. This
postcolonial space, the central contribution of this thesis, frees his writings from the
stranglehold of the Manichean paradigm in terms of which alterity or otherness is
perceived. Based on the hypothesis that identities are never fixed but constantly in
a state of performance, this project underwrites postcoloniality as a viable theoretical
mode of intervention in Conrad's early works.
The writer's early oeuvre yields richly to the contingency of our times in the early
twenty-first century as issues of race, gender and identity remain contested terrain.
This study adopts the position that Conrad stood both inside and outside Victorian
cultural and ethical space, developing an ambivalent mode of representation which
recuperated and simultaneously subverted the entrenched prejudices of his age.
Conceived proleptically, the characters of Conrad's early phase, traditionally
dismissed as those of an apprentice writer, pose a constant challenge to how we view
alterity in our everyday lives. / Thesis (Ph.D. (English))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2004.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:nwu/oai:dspace.nwu.ac.za:10394/394
Date January 2004
CreatorsSewlall, Haripersad
PublisherNorth-West University
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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