THE WORLDS OF JOSEPH CONRAD - The 2019 Cundill Lecture in History

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  • Опубликовано: 25 дек 2024
  • In a lecture based on the book that won the 2018 Cundill History Prize, "The Dawn Watch: Joseph Conrad in a Global World", Professor Maya Jasanoff (Harvard University) presents Conrad as a prophet of globalization. Jasanoff explores how Conrad was deeply influenced by the dawn of the twentieth century - the tensions of global capitalism, encroaching imperialism and unprecedented migration which still characterize our global world.
    Delivered in Montreal, QC on Wednesday, November 13, 2019.

Комментарии • 68

  • @lohkoonhoong6957
    @lohkoonhoong6957 3 года назад +17

    Joseph Conrad --- worthy of our undying regard.

  • @gregskigreg6422
    @gregskigreg6422 2 года назад +17

    I loved the lecture.The lady has such clear voice and a precise way of speaking.

  • @timothymontes2049
    @timothymontes2049 Год назад +7

    Two geniuses of fiction working at the same time: Conrad in the novel and Chekhov in the short story form. The late 19th century and early 20th was a golden age of fiction. The older I get as a reader the more I cherish this period of history. That pacing of story telling would be destroyed by modernism. Fantastic literature, by the way.

    • @marknewton6984
      @marknewton6984 8 месяцев назад

      Victory is a wonderful novel by Conrad. Also, Hemingway was a great short story writer.

  • @vinm300
    @vinm300 3 года назад +12

    19:00 the lecture starts.
    21:00 "His father was an overseer for a noble landowner"
    That means he was overseeing the serfs, who endured a miserable existence :
    no rights, no education, no freedom.
    The Polish nobles, when they new the game was up, and they were to be partitioned out of existence (1795) liberated the serfs (Proclamation of Połaniec, 1794).
    They had had a Damascene conversion to the Enlightenment - once the end was in sight.
    28:00 "Conrad's allowance" :- was 5x his wages.
    "On 10 July 1876 Conrad sailed for the West Indies as a steward (at a salary of 35 francs, equivalent to one-fifth the allowance he received from his uncle) in the barque Saint Antoine"

  • @marialightalphas9682
    @marialightalphas9682 2 года назад +6

    Excellent talk.

  • @Alex-ff8si
    @Alex-ff8si 2 года назад +6

    Brilliant background information to anybody interested in Conrad.

  • @TheWildphilosopher
    @TheWildphilosopher 4 года назад +9

    A great talk. Having read the book, "The Dawn Watch: Joseph Conrad in a Global World", I can only say, that I would highly recommend it to anyone who enjoyed this lecture. History doesn't get old. Fantastic. Thank you.

    • @thatchernelson8102
      @thatchernelson8102 3 года назад

      Sorry to be off topic but does anybody know of a way to log back into an instagram account..?
      I was dumb lost my account password. I would appreciate any assistance you can give me!

    • @armaniruben3135
      @armaniruben3135 3 года назад

      @Thatcher Nelson Instablaster =)

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      @thatchernelson8102 3 года назад

      @Armani Ruben thanks for your reply. I got to the site on google and I'm trying it out now.
      I see it takes quite some time so I will reply here later when my account password hopefully is recovered.

    • @thatchernelson8102
      @thatchernelson8102 3 года назад

      @Armani Ruben it did the trick and I finally got access to my account again. I'm so happy:D
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    • @armaniruben3135
      @armaniruben3135 3 года назад

      @Thatcher Nelson Happy to help xD

  • @petermorley3910
    @petermorley3910 3 года назад +5

    Superb discourse on her superb book! All three of these accomplished women taking part in the lecture are to be commended for not only knowing what they're talking about, but doing so in an engaging manner. Thanks for posting this 76 or so minutes of RUclips at it's best.

  • @gb99cat
    @gb99cat 3 года назад +12

    I loved Professor Jasanoff's book, &, as a result, I've gone back to read more Conrad. Great talk.

  • @virginiamendez993
    @virginiamendez993 Год назад +3

    An excellent lecture from Prof. Jasanoff. Congratulations!

  • @edgregory1
    @edgregory1 3 года назад +7

    Conrad's works have enriched my life. I Look foward to reading her book.

  • @myimorata7678
    @myimorata7678 Год назад +2

    Bought Prof. Jasanoff's book yesterday, based on this lecture. Can't wait to read it.

  • @jaroslawpeter3586
    @jaroslawpeter3586 3 года назад +16

    3/ The idea to become a sailor was not just a "romantic dream" of Conrad, but rather his child dream. But most direct, urgent reason was that he had to escape three Poland occupying empires to avoid military service in Russian imperial army. Formally he was the subject of Russian Czar and he would have to serve up to 25 years. Because he was the orphan, the son of the Polish nobility and patriots who gave lives for their country, he could not serve in the enemy's army which occupied and oppressed his country and contributed to death od both his parents. That it is why he had to run away far from Russia's occupied Poland. He would be accepted as refugee neither by Prussia nor Austrian empire. He would be expelled from both. Therefore, under above circumstances, he decided to follow his dreams and become a sailor. His uncle had approved it.

  • @a.meeeezy9576
    @a.meeeezy9576 Год назад +2

    His work is beyond beautiful

  • @Beretta249
    @Beretta249 4 месяца назад +2

    6:20 the lecture begins, with respect to the introductions.

  • @giovanameireles4576
    @giovanameireles4576 3 года назад +7

    Perfection! Congratulations from Brazil, professor. 🇧🇷

  • @Brian-ey7qs
    @Brian-ey7qs 11 месяцев назад +1

    Great book thanks Maya Jasanoff

  • @aya3769
    @aya3769 2 месяца назад

    What a great presentation

  • @brianbuch1
    @brianbuch1 2 года назад +3

    At around 42: Prof Jasanoff (Thank you!) talks about river navigation and how it's not straightforward. You can't get a better taste of what it might have been like than reading Twain's "Life on the Mississipi".

  • @ChrisW_Essex
    @ChrisW_Essex Год назад +1

    Hi, I was born in Stanford le hope, Essex Uk it’s about 20milea from London, we have a road named after Conrad here as he lived here for a period, I believe either before or adjacent to his time in Kent (near ashford), briefly reading I see it was possibly just two year he was in Essex and also at two locations in Stanford le hope… its noted that this location is not far from tilbury which is where the Thames ferry runs to Gravesend which I believe is where some of the early story of the heart of darkness is made, it would be interesting to know the exact years that he resided in Stanford le hope, cynically speaking SLH is close but also very far from the countryside these days

  • @JERRYSHONDA
    @JERRYSHONDA 6 месяцев назад

    breathtaking dreading the end

  • @dalegamburg8995
    @dalegamburg8995 3 года назад +4

    Waiting for 40 years for a lecture like this

  • @oscargoldman85
    @oscargoldman85 Год назад +3

    Completely missed the point of Heart of Darkness.
    It is about the ability for people to become psychopaths. It is called the "Heart" or the "shadow".
    It is the subtext, and not directly referred to, but sledgehammered by inference.
    It happened at the same time Carl Jung was wrestling with exactly the same issues
    Any discussion on the book, that doesnt refer to this is like a Star Wars book that never mentions the Force.

  • @davidwalker5054
    @davidwalker5054 9 месяцев назад

    I read the N,,,,,,,,,,, of the Narcissist and other story,s by Conrad and was blown away by his genius. it was only later I found out English was his Third Language unbelievable

  • @azzaz1
    @azzaz1 3 года назад +2

    I don't know if you're familiar wit singer/songwriter Tim Buckley. Shortly before his death he was planning a song cycle based on J.Conrad's The Outcast Of The Islands.

    • @cherisenokes7173
      @cherisenokes7173 2 года назад +1

      I love Tim Buckley, I didn’t know that …..He died far too young.

  • @blackbird5634
    @blackbird5634 2 года назад +1

    this is fascinating!

  • @shanewalters4632
    @shanewalters4632 2 месяца назад

    She's done a good job. I don't know if Conrad's dream of being a sailor was romantic so much as escapatory, though of course, the degrees of separation are hard to discern.

  • @alandavid48
    @alandavid48 6 месяцев назад

    Prof. Jasanoff seems to think that 'Globalisation' = international trade. Priceless

  • @sactownvegfest8869
    @sactownvegfest8869 3 года назад

    Maya Jasanoff is bringing me back to Conrad after a two decade hiatus; early on, I thought of a scene in 'Hope and Glory' and just now (11:09) when the map dropped down I felt I should share the scene: ruclips.net/video/61fCzBVqIgs/видео.html.

  • @kudlatykid
    @kudlatykid 2 года назад +2

    1:06:55 as always there is one "offended"
    they are offended that blacks where oppressed too

  • @hannamakela6989
    @hannamakela6989 6 месяцев назад

    That's right! Conrad's colonial landscape is not exactly a BRITISH colonial landscape. As someone with a background in literary studies, I always welcome a historian's perspective on fiction. History and literature - best pals forever! :)

  • @onenewworldmonkey
    @onenewworldmonkey 8 месяцев назад

    HE FOOLED ALL OF YOU. LOL
    I have gout and no one puts a bandage on it. The reason he had a bandage on his hand in the photo of the lawnchair is so that no one would want to shake his hand!
    This means it was all posed. He expected company. In the book "my personal experience with Joseph Conrad" the author mentions this.

  • @titiwhai
    @titiwhai Год назад

    Instead of arrows coming out of the forest it it cries of racism?

  • @zaffarqureshi1278
    @zaffarqureshi1278 3 года назад

    34:33

  • @jamesdrew6024
    @jamesdrew6024 3 года назад

    BENWAY!

  • @Gregory98
    @Gregory98 2 года назад +4

    Leftists talking about a genius who wrote in his third language and set standards for literary English is amusing to watch.

  • @NealDurando
    @NealDurando Год назад

    Quoting Adam Hochschild, save to decry his feverish fantasies, is really gross.

  • @dalegamburg8995
    @dalegamburg8995 3 года назад +1

    Having pluto within two degrees of jupiter your ruling planet in the twelph house of taurus ....material valuation...would explain suicide attempt,plus I he self destructive tendencies of sagittarius and Cancer

    • @sactownvegfest8869
      @sactownvegfest8869 3 года назад

      Huh? Wha?

    • @2msvalkyrie529
      @2msvalkyrie529 3 года назад

      🎵🎶 When the moon is in the
      7 th house and Jupiter aligns
      with Mars...🎵.......
      ( makes just as much sense ! )

    • @dalegamburg8995
      @dalegamburg8995 3 года назад

      @@2msvalkyrie529 Pluto death. + Jupiterwealthand luck,ruler of yoursagittariusn sign ego expansion+12thhouseAbbyss.+Taurus major material possession issue any way+Sagittarius 🏹 impulsively hazardous =death expands swan diving over the abbyssyou nearly impulsively follow him because Pluto just killed all your luck and everything you own. I'm not going to put in the work if none is listening but I thought you might oh, ih could go on.. but I'll be brief.plus I love that tune

  • @mikedaniels3009
    @mikedaniels3009 2 года назад

    Somebody please enlighten me on this Joe Con emphatuation. I identify his stuff as among the least appealing ordeals of compulsory reading. Heavy, stuffy, stocky style owing to contrived lingo completely devoid of breezy wit, a sense of humour & colloquialisms that flows, nay, drags along the pages like mélasse just fetched from the fridge, and each time I must get a page behind me I can't help this longing for a shot of good ole Mark Twain, Reggie Perrin, Jeff Archer or Ray Chandler.

    • @iii-qs7zr
      @iii-qs7zr Год назад +2

      Mike boy, you maybe sailing on the different waves

    • @christophercarrier2902
      @christophercarrier2902 Год назад

      Have you tried Typhoon?

    • @ChrisW_Essex
      @ChrisW_Essex Год назад

      Maybe cause Apocalypse now had Marlon Brando in it

    • @billetem5868
      @billetem5868 3 месяца назад

      Try "The Secret Agent" or "Under Western Eyes". I could never get into "Nostromo" but the PBS 3 part movie is pretty good, has some big stars in it. Outcast of the Islands with Trevor Howard is very good. The book I seem to recall is not rhetorical, not much purple prose. I liked reading Lord Jim, liked the prose style. "Chance" was his first commercial success. Perhaps you'd like it.

  • @2msvalkyrie529
    @2msvalkyrie529 3 года назад

    Thought it was Truman Capote on podium. Then realised :
    Voice was too masculine..

    • @jimpatterson4279
      @jimpatterson4279 Год назад +2

      You would not be jealous of this scholar’s knowledge would you?

    • @Of_infinite_Faith
      @Of_infinite_Faith 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@jimpatterson4279 they usually are, that's why they have stupid options with no substance

    • @marknewton6984
      @marknewton6984 8 месяцев назад

      Thought it was Bruce Jenner.