Joseph Conrad | Print |

Joseph Conrad was born in Berdichev, Poland in 1857. His original name was Jozef Teodor Konrad Korzeniowski. He is best known for his novels Lord Jim (1900), Nostromo (1904), and The Secret Agent (1907) and the short story Heart of Darkness (1902). Typical for his steep pessimism, he writes stories of men in extreme situations and like in Heart of Darkness about a man who finds himself drawn to a savage whom he only should despise. He first became familiar with English language at the age of eight when his father translated works of Shakespeare. Joseph went to school in Cracow and Switzerland but what he really wanted to do was to go to the sea. 1874 he went to Marseille to get a job on a ship. The following years he spent sailing around the world, f ex to West Indies, where he was involved in gunrunning. He gambled a lot, had huge debts and even attempted suicide by shooting himself in the chest. 1878 he landed for the first time in England and spent the next 16 years in the British merchant navy. 1886 he became a British citizen. The experiences from his life as a sailor greatly influenced his writing.

However, since child he had always wanted to go to Africa. 1889 he traveled to Congo and became a captain of a Congo river steamboat. " What he saw, did, and felt in the Congo are largely recorded in "Heart of Darkness," his most famous, finest, and most enigmatic story, the title of which signifies not only the heart of Africa, the dark continent, but also the heart of evil--everything that is corrupt, nihilistic, malign--and perhaps the heart of man. The story is central to Conrad's work and vision, and it is difficult not to think of his Congo experiences as traumatic. He may have exaggerated when he said, "Before the Congo I was a mere animal," but in a real sense the dying Kurtz's cry, "The horror! The horror!" was Conrad's. He suffered psychological, spiritual, even metaphysical shock in the Congo, and his physical health was also damaged; for the rest of his life, he was racked by recurrent fever and gout."

Conrad returned to England in 1891 and worked as a sailor for the last time 1894. His first book Almayer's Folly was published in 1895 and the next year An Outcast of the Islands. Conrad's best novels are considered to be Lord Jim (1900), Nostromo (1904), The Secret Agent (1907), and Under Western Eyes (1911). Conrad got married 1895 with Jessie George and had two sons with her. He lived in poor conditions, his health was failing and he often got in trouble with his temperament. Only in 1910 he started to get some recognition for his work and his financial situation improved. In April 1924 he refused an offer of knighthood from Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald. The same year Conrad died.


Novels:

  • Almayer's Folly (1895)
  • An Outcast of the Islands (1896)
  • The Nigger of the "Narcissus" (1897)
  • Lord Jim (1900)
  • The Inheritors (1901)
  • Romance (1903)
  • Nostromo (1904)
  • The Secret Agent (1907)
  • Under Western Eyes (1911)
  • Chance (1913)
  • Victory (1915)
  • The Shadow-Line: A Confession (1917)
  • The Arrow of Gold (1919)
  • The Rescue (1920)
  • The Rover (1923)
  • The Nature of a Crime (1924)

Short Stories:

  • Youth: A Narrative (1898)
  • Heart of Darkness (1902)
  • The End of the Tether (1902)
  • Typhoon and Other Stories (1903)
  • A Set of Six (1908)
    • Gaspar Ruiz
    • The Informer
    • The Anarchist
    • The Brute
    • The Duel
    • Il Conde
  • Twixt Land and Sea (1912)
  • Within the Tides (1915)
    • The Planter of Malta
    • The Inn of Two Witches
    • Because of the Dollars
  • Tales of Hearsay (1925)

Other works :

  • A Personal Record (1912)
  • Notes on My Books (1921)
  • Essays
    • John Galsworthy - an appreciation
    • The "Torrens"
    • Ocean Travel
    • Legends
    • The Dover Patrol
    • The Loss of the "Dalgonar"
    • A Glance at Two Books
    • The Congo Diary
    • A Smile of Fortune
    • The Future of Constantinople
    • Memorandum on the Scheme of Fitting-Out a Sailing Ship
    • Outside Literature
    • The Unlighten Coast
    • Travel
    • Stephen Crane
    • War Book
    • Cookery

Play Adaptations:

  • Laughing Anne -from his "Because of the Dollars"
  • One Day More - from his "Tomorrow"
 
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