Name: Joshi Toral B.
Paper: 2 Neo-Classical Literature
Topic: Various Themes in Robinson Crusoe
SEM: 3, M.A. part 2.
Year: 2012
Submitted to,
Dr.Dilip Barad,
M.K Bhavnagar
University,
Bhavnagar
· Religion
and self-discovery:-
The entire tale can be read as illustrating Crusoe’s
negotiation with religion and faith. It is on the island that Crusoe
rediscovers faith. He opens the Bible at random and this is what he first
reads: ‘call on me in the Day of trouble, and I will deliver and thou salt
glorify me’. Crusoe believes: ‘the
words were very apt to my case’. He believes how God has constantly ‘delivered
him’ and then realizes: ‘But I had not glorified him’.
The
realism of the adventure merges with the spiritual and theological narrative of
the Bible when Crusoe locates everything that happens to him within the
framework of religion and belief. He finds exact matches between the incidents
of his life and the stories in the scripture, thus rediscovering his faith.
But the novel also records Crusoe’s crisis of faith.
There are moments when he loses his faith. For instance, when he sees the
footprint for the first time, he is struck by fear. This is what he records as
his feeling:
“Fear banished all my religious hope; all
that former confidence in God, which was founded upon such wonderful experience
as I had of his goodness, now vanished.”
Defoe suggests a
crisis of faith here, when Crusoe feels the ‘constant snare of the fear of man’
as opposes to the confidence of ‘resting upon Providence’.
The Ambivalence of Mastery
Crusoe’s
success in mastering his situation, overcoming his obstacles, and controlling
his environment shows the condition of mastery in a positive light, at least at
the beginning of the novel. Crusoe lands in an inhospitable environment and
makes it his home. His taming and domestication of wild goats and parrots with
Crusoe as their master illustrates his new found control. Moreover, Crusoe’s
mastery over nature makes him a master of his fate and of himself. Early in the
novel, he frequently blames himself for disobeying his father’s advice or
blames the destiny that drove him to sea. But in the later part of the novel,
Crusoe stops viewing himself as a passive victim and strikes a new note of
self-determination. In building a home for himself on the island, he finds that
he is master of his life—he suffers a hard fate and still finds prosperity.
But
this theme of mastery becomes more complex and less positive after Friday’s
arrival, when the idea of mastery comes to apply more to unfair relationships
between humans. In Chapter XXIII, Crusoe teaches Friday the word “[m]aster” even before teaching him “yes” and “no,” and indeed he lets him “know that was to be [Crusoe’s] name.” Crusoe never entertains the idea of considering Friday a friend
or equal—for some reason, superiority comes instinctively to him. We further
question Crusoe’s right to be called “[m]aster” when he later refers to himself
as “king” over the natives and Europeans, who are his “subjects.” In short,
while Crusoe seems praiseworthy in mastering his fate, the praiseworthiness of
his mastery over his fellow humans is more doubtful. Defoe explores the link
between the two in his depiction of the colonial mind.
The Necessity of Repentance
Crusoe’s experiences constitute not simply an adventure story in
which thrilling things happen, but also a moral tale illustrating the right and
wrong ways to live one’s life. This moral and religious dimension of the tale
is indicated in the Preface, which states that Crusoe’s story is being
published to instruct others in God’s wisdom, and one vital part of this wisdom
is the importance of repenting one’s sins. While it is important to be grateful
for God’s miracles, as Crusoe is when his grain sprouts, it is not enough
simply to express gratitude or even to pray to God, as Crusoe does several
times with few results. Crusoe needs repentance most, as he learns from the
fiery angelic figure that comes to him during a feverish hallucination and
says, “Seeing all these things have not brought thee to
repentance, now thou salt die.”
Crusoe believes that his major sin is his rebellious behavior toward his
father, which he refers to as his
“original sin,” akin to Adam and Eve’s first disobedience of God. This biblical
reference also suggests that Crusoe’s exile from civilization represents Adam
and Eve’s expulsion from Eden.
For Crusoe, repentance consists of acknowledging his wretchedness
and his absolute dependence on the Lord. This admission marks a turning point
in Crusoe’s spiritual consciousness, and is almost a born-again experience for
him. After repentance, he complains much less about his sad fate and views the
island more positively. Later, when Crusoe is rescued and his fortune restored,
he compares himself to Job, who also regained divine favor. Ironically, this
view of the necessity of repentance ends up justifying sin: Crusoe may never
have learned to repent if he had never sinfully disobeyed his father in the
first place. Thus, as powerful as the theme of repentance is in the novel, it
is nevertheless complex and ambiguous.
The Importance of Self-Awareness
Crusoe’s arrival on the island does not make him revert to a brute
existence controlled by animal instincts, and, unlike animals, he remains
conscious of him at all times. Indeed, his island existence actually deepens
his self-awareness as he withdraws from the external social world and turns
inward. The idea that the individual must keep a careful reckoning of the state
of his own soul is a key point in the Presbyterian doctrine that Defoe took
seriously all his life. We see that in his normal day-to-day activities, Crusoe
keeps accounts of himself enthusiastically and in various ways. For example, it
is significant that Crusoe’s makeshift calendar does not simply mark the
passing of days, but instead more egocentrically marks the days he has spent on
the island: it is about him, a sort of self-conscious or autobiographical
calendar with him at its center. Similarly, Crusoe obsessively keeps a journal
to record his daily activities, even when they amount to nothing more than
finding a few pieces of wood on the beach or waiting inside while it rains.
Crusoe feels the importance of staying aware of his situation at all times. We
can also sense Crusoe’s impulse toward self-awareness in the fact that he
teaches his parrot to say the words, “Poor Robin Crusoe. . . . Where have you been?” This sort of self-examining thought is natural
for anyone alone on a desert island, but it is given a strange intensity when
we recall that Crusoe has spent months teaching the bird to say it back to him.
Crusoe teaches nature itself to voice his own self-awareness
Hello Toral, can we consider individualism as a major theme in "Robinson Crusoe"? Please share your views with reason..
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