Born into a Polish szlachta (noble) family, the extraordinary modern
novelist Joseph Conrad maintained, even in exile, strong ties to his
Polish heritage and culture. Yet the author earned renown by writing in
English, often about nautical adventures in remote parts of the world.
In Joseph Conrad's Polish Soul, G. W. Stephen Brodsky seeks to reclaim
the essentially Polish sensibility of Conrad's groundbreaking oeuvre. He
finds in Conrad's work a distinct Polonism that plays intriguingly with
selfhood, freedom, and irony. For Brodsky, Conrad's outlook and writing
betray numerous contradictions. Despite the novelist's practical
realism, Conrad was drawn to romance, orientalism, and the exotic.
Frequently sick, he nevertheless pursued a life at sea. He despised
adventurers, yet loved risk. An instinctive skepticism, conservatism,
and nationalism complicated his liberalism and respect for humanity, and
though he resigned himself to Poland's tragic destiny, Conrad refused to
despair over the terribleness of his times. In this incomparable study,
Brodsky shows how these inherent aspects of Conrad's personality inform
and guide his Polonism, along with the best attributes of his fiction.