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The Secret Agent: A Far from Simple Tale

Publication date: 2018

Yearbook of Conrad Studies, 2018, Vol. 13, pp. 55 - 64

https://doi.org/10.4467/20843941YC.18.005.11240

Authors

Gerard Kilroy
Jesuit University Ignatianum in Krakow, Mikołaja Kopernika 26, Kraków, Poland
ul. Mikołaja Kopernika 26, Kraków, Poland
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Titles

The Secret Agent: A Far from Simple Tale

Abstract

This article examines Conrad’s novel in the light of the Irish Fenian bombing campaign of 1881-1885. Conrad’s avoidance of any mention of their destructive methods and not unreasonable political objectives, allows him to focus on the absurdity of the Russian Nihilists, also resident in London at this time: their idle, parasitic and despairing devotion to indiscriminate destruction. While the first half of the novel is a metaphysical analysis of evil, where passive men do nothing, the second half is determined by its heroine, the active agent, Winnie, who invites comparison with Tess of the D’Urbervilles, shares with Lena in Victory the distinction of dying in a just cause, and satisfies the reader’s desire for a justice which neither the police nor the government is willing to offer. Conrad traces the roots of indiscriminate terrorism to Nihilist despair and Russian willingness to use London as a stage for its states-sponsored terrorism. His analysis of ‘the rules of the game’ agreed by security services, spies and terrorists, is as relevant today as it was in 1907. 

References

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Baines, Jocelyn. Joseph Conrad: A Critical Biography. London: Weidenfeld, 1961.

Conrad, Joseph. The Secret Agent. London: Dent, 1907. All references to Penguin edition, 1963.

Conrad, Joseph. Victory. London: Dent, 1915. Edition used, Penguin, 1989.

Conrad, Joseph. “The Secret Sharer”. In idem. Twixt Land and Sea (1912).

Frank,  Michael  C.  “Plots  on  London:  Terrorism  in  Turn-of-the-Century  British  Fiction”.  In Literature in Terrorism: Comparative Perspectives. Eds. M. C. Frank and E. Gruber. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2012.

Short, K. R. M. The Dynamite War: Irish-American Bombers in Victorian Britain. Dublin: Gill and Macmillan, 1979.

Stevenson, Robert Louis [and Fanny Van de Grift]. More New Arabian Nights: The Dynamiter (1885). In The Works of Robert Louis Stevenson. Tusitala Edition, vol. 3. London: William Heinemann, 1924.

Weil, Simone. “The Iliad or the Poem of Force”. Transl. M. McCarthy. Chicago Review 18.2 (1965): 5-30 (23).

Information

Information: Yearbook of Conrad Studies, 2018, Vol. 13, pp. 55 - 64

Article type: Original article

Authors

Jesuit University Ignatianum in Krakow, Mikołaja Kopernika 26, Kraków, Poland
ul. Mikołaja Kopernika 26, Kraków, Poland

Published at: 2018

Article status: Open

Licence: CC BY-NC-ND  licence icon

Percentage share of authors:

Gerard Kilroy (Author) - 100%

Article corrections:

-

Publication languages:

English

View count: 1667

Number of downloads: 1964

<p><em>The Secret Agent</em>: A Far from Simple Tale</p>