Joseph Conrad’s Lord Jim, Stein, and the use and abuse of entomology

Based on an implausible perception of entomology (the study of insects), George Waddington attempts to debauch the moral integrity of the character Stein in Joseph Conrad’s much-discussed novel Lord Jim. This tarnishing is part of an overall trend to undermine the greatness of literary artworks. Wad...

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Main Author: Etienne Terblanche
Format: Article
Language:Afrikaans
Published: AOSIS 2025-06-01
Series:Literator
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Online Access:https://literator.org.za/index.php/literator/article/view/2124
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author Etienne Terblanche
author_facet Etienne Terblanche
author_sort Etienne Terblanche
collection DOAJ
description Based on an implausible perception of entomology (the study of insects), George Waddington attempts to debauch the moral integrity of the character Stein in Joseph Conrad’s much-discussed novel Lord Jim. This tarnishing is part of an overall trend to undermine the greatness of literary artworks. Waddington’s accusations against Stein and the reception of his article destabilise the novel’s and critics’ more even-minded and largely positive perception of Stein’s nature, casting doubt about the novel’s morality as a whole. The present piece reads against the grain of this trend and reconsiders the critical reading of Lord Jim in terms of a more accurate appraisal of entomology’s praxes and values, and Stein’s entomology in particular. The author is a practising lepidopterist (student of butterflies and moths), which is the platform on which the piece offers its critique. Contribution: The present article stabilises the reading of Joseph Conrad’s much-discussed novel Lord Jim. It shows that Stein’s entomology as presented by Conrad embodies an additional reason for celebrating the novel’s resonance and artistic merits, which have been celebrated for more than a century, because it creates a particularly informative and compelling picture of the character with a view to his entomological studies and the values that undergird them.
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spelling doaj-art-a4f7fe6e973c4d6b9b485ee9312c0b5f2025-07-01T14:03:04ZafrAOSISLiterator0258-22792219-82372025-06-01461e1e1110.4102/lit.v46i1.21241458Joseph Conrad’s Lord Jim, Stein, and the use and abuse of entomologyEtienne Terblanche0Unit for Languages and Literature in the South African Context, Faculty of Humanities, North-West University, PotchefstroomBased on an implausible perception of entomology (the study of insects), George Waddington attempts to debauch the moral integrity of the character Stein in Joseph Conrad’s much-discussed novel Lord Jim. This tarnishing is part of an overall trend to undermine the greatness of literary artworks. Waddington’s accusations against Stein and the reception of his article destabilise the novel’s and critics’ more even-minded and largely positive perception of Stein’s nature, casting doubt about the novel’s morality as a whole. The present piece reads against the grain of this trend and reconsiders the critical reading of Lord Jim in terms of a more accurate appraisal of entomology’s praxes and values, and Stein’s entomology in particular. The author is a practising lepidopterist (student of butterflies and moths), which is the platform on which the piece offers its critique. Contribution: The present article stabilises the reading of Joseph Conrad’s much-discussed novel Lord Jim. It shows that Stein’s entomology as presented by Conrad embodies an additional reason for celebrating the novel’s resonance and artistic merits, which have been celebrated for more than a century, because it creates a particularly informative and compelling picture of the character with a view to his entomological studies and the values that undergird them.https://literator.org.za/index.php/literator/article/view/2124joseph conradlord jimsteinentomologylepidopteryliterary valuationjames brookealfred russel wallace
spellingShingle Etienne Terblanche
Joseph Conrad’s Lord Jim, Stein, and the use and abuse of entomology
Literator
joseph conrad
lord jim
stein
entomology
lepidoptery
literary valuation
james brooke
alfred russel wallace
title Joseph Conrad’s Lord Jim, Stein, and the use and abuse of entomology
title_full Joseph Conrad’s Lord Jim, Stein, and the use and abuse of entomology
title_fullStr Joseph Conrad’s Lord Jim, Stein, and the use and abuse of entomology
title_full_unstemmed Joseph Conrad’s Lord Jim, Stein, and the use and abuse of entomology
title_short Joseph Conrad’s Lord Jim, Stein, and the use and abuse of entomology
title_sort joseph conrad s lord jim stein and the use and abuse of entomology
topic joseph conrad
lord jim
stein
entomology
lepidoptery
literary valuation
james brooke
alfred russel wallace
url https://literator.org.za/index.php/literator/article/view/2124
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