The Imperial Eyes: Reading Joseph Conrad’s Lord Jim and The Secret Sharer
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Central Department of English Kirtipur, Kathmandu
Abstract
The research examines similarities between Joseph Conrad’s white-European-
adventurer voice in Lord Jim and The Secret Sharer, both seafaring narratives written in the
heydays of European imperialism. This research work seeks to question the rationale after
Conrad’s sympathy toward European victims and empathy toward other non-European and
native-African people. The nature of authority that Marlow, Conrad’s mouthpiece and
narrator, seems to establish in both texts is imperial, including description of landscapes, the
people and their culture. The present work attempts to unmask psychological ambiguities
inherent in Conrad from his socio-political standpoint, and the underlying ambition behind
Conrad’s memorial reconstruction of Jim and the motif implicit in Conrad’s narratives.
