An Outcast on the Island

· The Collected Works of Joseph Conrad Livre 2 · Minerva Heritage Press
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À propos de cet e-book

Joseph Conrad’s An Outcast of the Islands (1896), his second novel, functions as a prequel to Almayer’s Folly, revisiting the decaying world of European colonialism in the Malay Archipelago. The narrative traces the downfall of Peter Willems, a disgraced European trader whose moral weakness and arrogance lead him to betray multiple communities—first his Dutch employers, then the Indigenous people who shelter him. Stranded in a remote river settlement, Willems becomes entangled with Aïssa, the daughter of a local leader, his obsession with her amplifying his self-destructive spiral. Conrad dissects the corrosive effects of racial and cultural entitlement, as Willems’ belief in his inherent superiority blinds him to the consequences of his actions. The novel’s dense, atmospheric prose mirrors the suffocating isolation of the jungle, where human pettiness clashes with the indifferent vastness of nature. While critiquing colonial exploitation, the text remains entangled in period stereotypes, particularly in its exoticized portrayal of Aïssa and Malay societies. Structurally, it experiments with shifting perspectives and moral ambiguity, foreshadowing Conrad’s later modernist innovations.


This modern edition of Conrad's classic novel includes a fresh Afterword, extensive reference materials including a timeline of Conrad's life and works, character glossary and group discussion questions on this literary classic. The text of the novel has been slightly edited to remove archaic terminology and make it more readable to the modern reader.


Where Almayer’s Folly hinted at moral failure, Outcast dives fully into its waters, showing Willems as a man both driven and devoured by ego. With hypnotic prose and a growing sense of fatalism, Conrad paints a vivid portrait of a man unraveling—and the treacherous currents that drag him down. He is not merely corrupt but corrupted—by pride, by lust, by the very desperation of being cut adrift. The jungle looms not just as setting but as psychic terrain: lush, labyrinthine, and indifferent. Around Willems, native cultures observe and adapt, while European figures like Captain Lingard attempt, futilely, to enforce order on an alien world. What emerges is a deeply ironic vision of empire, where so-called civilization brings not enlightenment but chaos.

The novel unravels the myth of European exceptionalism through Willems’ disintegration. His initial fall—embezzlement and exile—is framed not as tragedy but as inevitability, the logical endpoint of a man who views himself as inherently entitled to transgress boundaries. The jungle, dense and unyielding, becomes a psychological landscape: its labyrinthine rivers and impenetrable foliage mirror Willems’ escalating delusions of control. Aïssa, though reduced to a colonial trope of the “dangerous native woman,” inadvertently exposes the fragility of his identity. Her agency, limited by Conrad’s Eurocentric lens, still disrupts Willems’ fantasies, revealing his dependence on the very cultures he claims to dominate. Lingard, the merchant captain who alternately rescues and abandons Willems, embodies the capriciousness of colonial power—a force that creates and discards outcasts to maintain its mythos. The narrative’s irony is relentless: Willems’ final act of betrayal, meant to reclaim power, only cements his irrelevance. Conrad strips away the romance of “going native,” presenting cross-cultural entanglement as a collision of mutual exploitation. Even redemption is denied; the jungle absorbs Willems’ failures without notice, leaving only the faintest ripple in its indifferent expanse.

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À propos de l'auteur

Born Józef Teodor Konrad Korzeniowski, Conrad was a Polish-British writer who is regarded as one of the greatest novelists to write in the English language. His works explore the pinnacles and abysses of human nature, as seen in novels like "Heart of Darkness" and "Lord Jim." Conrad's writing style and themes influenced the development of modernist literature.

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