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Maya Jasanoff

    Les travaux de Maya Jasanoff explorent l'histoire de la Grande-Bretagne moderne et de son empire, particulièrement aux XVIIIe et XIXe siècles. Elle enquête sur l'expansion britannique en Inde et en Égypte à travers le regard des collectionneurs d'art et offre une histoire mondiale novatrice des loyalistes américains déplacés par la révolution. Son œuvre éclaire les liens complexes entre vies, culture et conquête dans le monde impérial. Jasanoff explore également les paysages littéraires de Joseph Conrad, contribuant par des essais et des critiques perspicaces à des revues littéraires de premier plan.

    Ancestors
    Edge of Empire
    Liberty's Exiles
    Edge of Empire : Conquest and Collecting in the East 1750-1850
    The Dawn Watch
    Liberty's Exiles
    • `More than just a work of first-class scholarship, Liberty's Exiles is a deeply moving masterpiece that fulfils the historian's most challenging ambition: to revivify past experience.' Niall Ferguson Liberty's Exiles was shortlisted for the 2011 BBC Samuel Johnson Prize.

      Liberty's Exiles
    • The Dawn Watch

      • 400pages
      • 14 heures de lecture
      4,1(729)Évaluer

      [G]racefully written . . . the book is a great pleasure to read, for Jasanoff is driven to understand the world that shaped a writer she loves. - Adam Hochschild, Foreign Affairs Fascinating...[Conrad's] art, which he defined as the capacity to make readers hear, feel and see, as able to capture the contradictions within empires and the resistance to them. This is the Conrad who comes alive in Jasanoff's masterful study. The Dawn Watch will become a creative companion to all students of his work. It has made me want to re- establish connections with the Conrad whose written sentences once inspired in me the same joy as a musical phrase. -Ngugi wa Thiong'o, The New York Times Book Review Terrific...Weaving together biography, history, literature and her own travels, this fascinating, beautifully written work takes one of those literary giants frequently written off these days as a dead white male and reveals how he inhabited and grappled with a world startlingly like our own...[Jasanoff] explains why it's important that we grapple with figures like Conrad even if we don't share their values. History is like therapy for the present, she writes. It makes us talk about its parents. She's right as well as witty. And reading The Dawn Watch, we see how we are in many ways Conrad's children. Even if you hated 'Lord Jim' in high school, this book will make you want to pick it up again. - John Powers, NPR Brilliant...Jasanoff is an insightful and imaginative historian...The book comes in the form of a biography of Joseph Conrad, but in fact through Conrad she tells the story of a whole phase in world history...Boundless curiosity is also an attribute of Maya Jasanoff...[Her] travels have given her an empathy and an understanding for Conrad, and also for the victims of imperialism, that breathe on every page of this magnificent book...This is the best book on Conrad since [Ian] Watt's. Maya Jasanoff has given us a Conrad for the 21st century. -Los Angeles Review of Books Jasanoff is a splendid storyteller and stylist. -San Francisco Chronicle A rewarding, richly textured read, sprawling in its reach and full of surprising cross-connections... Jasanoff...shares with her subject the knack of capturing human experience in poetic fistfuls of language, although it's sometimes hard to know where Conrad's magic stops and her own starts. -The American Scholar The Dawn Watch is the most vivid and suggestive biography of Conrad ever written...[a] beautifully written book. - The Wall Street Journal Enlightening, compassionate, superb -John Le Carré With wit, nuance, and roving insight, Harvard historian Maya Jasanoff's The Dawn Watch: Joseph Conrad in a Global World maps the massively influential and controversial author's life and work, finding that the themes of his time- dislocation and connection, immigration and xenophobia, power and powerlessness-uncannily mirror our own. -Megan O'Grady, Vogue.com's 10 Best Books of 2017 [A] brilliant study . . . The Dawn Watch will win prizes, and if it doesn't, there is something wrong with the prizes. -The Guardian [Jasanoff] Skillfully integrates details of Conrad's life and accounts of his four greatest works, linking the challenges and forces that lie behind and within the novels to those of the 21st century...A powerful encouragement to read his books. -The Economist This is an unobtrusively skillful, subtle, clear-eyed book, beautifully narrated...It is Jasanoff's warmth towards her subject that comes through. -Financial Times [Conrad's] life story has been told many times, but Maya Jasanoff's stands out for its vivid and imaginative writing...she provides rich background details on multiple topics...her attempts to reveal the hidden springs of Conrad's fiction are often perceptive. -Sunday Times (UK) Excellent-an engrossing, heartfelt exploration of the ragged frontier between public history, private experience, and imagination, from wh

      The Dawn Watch
    • Talented historian Maya Jasanoff offers an alternative history of the British Empire. It is not about conquest - but rather a collection of startling and fascinating personal accounts of cross-cultural exchange from those who found themselves on the edges of Empire.

      Edge of Empire : Conquest and Collecting in the East 1750-1850
    • Liberty's Exiles

      American Loyalists in the Revolutionary World

      • 496pages
      • 18 heures de lecture
      3,9(72)Évaluer

      Awarded the National Book Critics Circle Award, this compelling narrative explores profound themes of identity, resilience, and the human experience. The author weaves together rich character development and evocative prose, drawing readers into a world that challenges perceptions and evokes deep emotions. With a unique blend of personal and universal stories, the work not only captivates but also invites reflection on broader societal issues. This distinguished recognition highlights its impact and significance in contemporary literature.

      Liberty's Exiles
    • Edge of Empire

      Lives, Culture, and Conquest in the East, 1750-1850

      • 416pages
      • 15 heures de lecture
      3,9(136)Évaluer

      Through the lens of collectors in the British Empire's frontiers, the narrative reveals intimate stories from India and Egypt that challenge traditional views of imperialism. Maya Jasanoff explores the personal experiences of individuals entangled in the empire, highlighting their relationships and identities. This comprehensive research spans four continents, presenting a nuanced history that emphasizes the complexities of human connection amid power dynamics. The book illustrates how these historical traces resonate in contemporary society, offering a fresh perspective on imperial legacies.

      Edge of Empire
    • Ancestors

      • 512pages
      • 18 heures de lecture
      Ancestors
    • 4,0(26)Évaluer

      Arcydzieło. Jedna z najważniejszych książek na temat kolonializmu, jakie powstały w naszych czasach. William Dalrymple, „The Guardian” Najlepsza książka 2017 „New York Timesa” Joseph Conrad i narodziny globalnego świata łączy w sobie historię, biografię i relację z podróży. Maya Jasanoff, jedna z najlepiej zapowiadających się historyczek młodego pokolenia, podąża śladami Conrada i historii z jego czterech największych dzieł: Tajnego agenta, Lorda Jima, Jądra ciemności i Nostromo. W wizjonerskim stylu zgłębia życie i czasy Conrada, ukazując dwie burzliwe epoki globalizacji – współczesną i tę z przełomu XIX i XX wieku. Joseph Conrad urodził się w Berdyczowie, w zaborze rosyjskim, w 1857 roku jako Józef Teodor Konrad Korzeniowski. W wieku szesnastu lat porzucił majątek opiekuna prawnego Tadeusza Bobrowskiego, by zostać marynarzem. W ciągu dwudziestu lat opłynął wszystkie morza świata, po czym zamieszkał na stałe w Anglii i chwycił za pióro. Obserwował wzbierający, nastawiony na rywalizację „nowy imperializm”, który panoszył się w niemal każdym zamieszkanym zakątku naszego globu. Przyglądał się również z bliska miejscom położonym „o trzysta mil od wszelkich poczt i telegrafów”. Widział hipokryzję, stojącą za najważniejszymi ideałami Zachodu. W tej wykraczającej poza ramy gatunkowe, porywającej intelektualnie i głęboko ludzkiej publikacji, wyruszamy z autorką w podróż do mrocznego jądra Conradowskiego świata – a stamtąd prosto do naszego własnego jądra ciemności.

      Joseph Conrad i narodziny globalnego świata