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Nostromo

Part of the Broadview literary texts series
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Nostromo, first published in 1904, is arguably Conrad’s greatest and most complex novel.

A compelling adventure story, it is also a novel of profound psychological insight and of powerful political implications.

It tells the story of a Central American state whose silver mine serves both literally and metaphorically as the source of the country‘s value.

Written at the time of the development of the Panama Canal, Nostromo is set in the imaginary province of Sulaco, which secedes from the federation of Costaguana in order to protect its natural resource, the silver mine.

The parallels with the ‘revolution’ fomented in Panama by the United States in 1903 are striking; just as Panama seceded from Columbia to satisfy the material interests of the canal builders, so the secession of Sulaco serves the material interests of ‘the Gould concession.’ In this edition a variety of documents from the period (including material concerning American involvement in Central America in the early twentieth century, early critical notices, and family letters of Conrad’s) help to set the text in context.

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Product Details
Broadview Press Ltd
1551110741 / 9781551110745
Paperback / softback
823.912
30/04/1997
Canada
596 pages
140 x 216 mm, 655 grams