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Robert Louis Stevenson and the Colonial Imagination (Hardcover, New Ed)
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Robert Louis Stevenson and the Colonial Imagination (Hardcover, New Ed)
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In her distinguished and hauntingly rendered book, Ann C. Colley
provides a fresh insight into Stevenson's multi-voiced South Seas
fiction, as well as into the particulars and complications of
living within a newly established site of Empire. Bringing to light
information from the archives of the London Missionary Society and
from other sources, such as the Royal Geographical Society
(London), the Writers' Museum (Edinburgh), the Beinecke Library
(Yale University), and the Huntington Library (San Marino,
California), Colley examines the intricate nature of Robert Louis
Stevenson's relation to imperialism. In particular, she
investigates Stevenson's complex relationship to the missionary
culture that surrounded him during the last six years of his life
(1888-1894), revealing hitherto unscouted routes by which to
understand Stevenson's experiences while he was cruising among the
South Sea islands, and later while he was a resident colonial in
Samoa. Beginning with a history of the missionaries in the Pacific
that reveals Stevenson's criticism of, yet ultimate support for,
their work, and demonstrates how these attitudes helped shape his
South Sea fiction, Robert Louis Stevenson and the Colonial
Imagination constitutes a major work of reconstruction from
archival sources. Subsequent chapters focus on Stevenson's
struggles with personal and cultural identity in the South Seas,
and his interest in photography, panoramas, and magic lantern
shows, revealing Stevenson's sensitivity to the ways light plays
upon darkness to create meaning. In addition, Stevenson's serious
commitment to political issues and his thoughts about power and
nationhood are explored. Finally, Stevenson's recollections of his
childhood are engaged not only to suggest an unacknowledged source
(the juvenile missionary magazines) for A Child's Garden of Verses,
but also to illuminate the generous reach of his imagination that
exceeds the formulae of the missionary culture and the boundaries
of the colonial construct.
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