Jimhd | Lord

The second half of the novel transports Jim to Patusan, a remote, feudal Malay settlement. Here, Jim becomes “Tuan Jim”—Lord Jim. He defeats the local tyrant Sherif Ali, wins the trust of the chief Doramin, and earns the love of the native girl Jewel. For a moment, it appears that he has achieved the romantic destiny he always craved.

The Unbearable Stain of Imagination: Narrative, Honor, and the Self in Joseph Conrad’s Lord Jim Lord JimHD

The central event of the novel—the abandonment of the pilgrim ship Patna —is famously an anti-climax. There is no storm, no heroic battle. The ship has a cracked bulkhead, and in a moment of panic, Jim and the other European officers leap into a lifeboat, leaving 800 sleeping pilgrims to drown. (The ship, ironically, does not sink.) The second half of the novel transports Jim

F. R. Leavis included it in The Great Tradition , praising its moral seriousness, while later postcolonial critics have interrogated its racial politics, noting that the novel’s non-white characters (the pilgrims, the Patusan villagers) remain largely voiceless and serve as props for Jim’s psychodrama. For a moment, it appears that he has

The novel also explores the theme of colonial delusion. Jim’s success in Patusan depends entirely on the natives’ belief in his white, European superiority. Conrad subtly critiques this: Jim is no more a “lord” to Doramin than he was a competent first mate on the Patna. The entire colonial enterprise is revealed as a shared fiction, a play of shadows. When the fiction collapses, only death remains.