Joseph Conrad and Honor

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A01=GW Stephen Brodsky
Author_GW Stephen Brodsky
British Modernism
Category=DSBH
Category=GTM
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Ethics
Faith
forthcoming
Heart of Darkness
Honor
Morality

Product details

  • ISBN 9781041357582
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 24 Sep 2026
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Joseph Conrad and Honor: Victory in Defeat explores the idea and themes of honor both explicit and implicit in Conrad’s life, letters and oeuvre, and its origins in Conrad’s Polish, French and English philosophical, historical and cultural contexts. Focusing on Conrad’s family history, his lives in Poland, England, at sea, and as a writer, the book also explores the idea of honor in Conrad’s novels and stories, with especial focus on the Napoléonic era tales (e.g., “The Duel”, “The Warrior’s Soul”, The Rover and Suspense), and from Conrad’s eastern experience (e.g., Almayer’s Folly and “Karain.” In Conrad's tradition true honor lies, not in material victory, but in the victory of spirit even in defeat.

In this new monograph, author GW Stephen Brodsky shows that Conrad’s understanding of honor was shaped by the Polish szlachta (nobility) of clan and class, which emphasized conviction, courage, solidarity, and fidelity to duty. For Conrad, honor was not merely a personal virtue but a communal ethic, grounded in disinterested service to one’s class, nation, family, and faith. This ethos contrasted sharply with what he saw as the fraudulent and ego-driven codes of honor in other cultures, such as the French cult of military glory, the English obsession with conformity, and the aristocratic fixation on aesthetics over ethics.

Conrad's convictions are shown to contrast markedly with the moral decay and semantic degradation of honor in his era, where such terms as "duty" and "fidelity" had lost their sacred significance. An apparent neglect of honor in most Conrad scholarship is addressed—particularly in Western criticism focused on Conrad's perceived alienation and guilt—by emphasizing the affirmative aspects of Conrad's art and his aristocratic vision through Polish and post-Glasnost perspectives.

GW Stephen Brodsky, CD, DPhil, DLitt, has been a career soldier, a professor of Literature and prodigious author. His books in military literature have included Gentlemen of the Blade, a social and literary history of the British Army; God’s Dodger, The Story of a World War II Frontline Chaplain; The King’s Bishop, the memoir of a corporal in Korean War; and other military literature. A specialist and elder statesman in Conrad studies, he is author of Joseph Conrad’s Polish Soul; Intimations of Joseph Conrad; and numerous articles appearing in published in Conradiana, The Conradian, Conrad: Eastern and Western Perspectives, The Yearbook of Conrad Studies (Jagiellonian University, Cracow), Modern Fiction Studies and Zwischen Ost und West: Joseph Conrad im europäischen Gespräch.

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