Robinson Crusoe
Robinson Crusoe
Robinson Crusoe
travel narrative in which the hero journeys to Africa, Brazil, China, and Siberia,
and then is shipwrecked on a deserted island. But to view the novel as simply a
fascinating travelogue is to ignore much of what makes it valuable and interesting
to modern readers.
Throughout the narrative, Defoe details an individuals struggle to survive in
basically hostile surroundings. As part of his day-to-day existence, Robinson
Crusoe faces starvation, illness, pain, possible insanity, even danger from
cannibals, but he salvages what he can from the shipwreck and provides himself
with shelter and rudimentary furniture and tools. Through ingenuity, hard work,
and common sense, he improvises many of the comforts to which he was
accustomed in England. Crusoe never broods about his isolation; rather he
occupies his time productively and triumphs over his unpromising environment,
thus becoming an example of the triumph of the human spirit.
Extremely popular with the reading public of Defoes day, Robinson Crusoe is for
the modern reader an excellent introduction to the way of life of the average 17thcentury Englishman. A member of the large and prosperous middle class,
Robinson Crusoe is a practical and materialistic man who believes in success and
in trade, who aspires to better himself socially and financially, and who tries to live
a carefully controlled and documented life. Like many of his contemporaries,
Crusoe scrupulously keeps a journal in which he records his daily activities and his
observations about his situation. Crusoe is also deeply religious. He sees Gods
will manifested in the everyday events of his life and frequently records his
thoughts on the role of Providence in the affairs of humans. The character of
Robinson Crusoe embodies the 17th-century individuals struggle between the
pursuit of money and the pursuit of God.
Robinson Crusoe is important historically as one of the prototypes of the modern
novel in English. Defoes tale contains many novelistic elements, among them the
creation of believable characters and a world that is both recognizable and exotic.
where Crusoe is imprisoned after his capture by pirates, and then to Brazil, where
he sets up as a planter after his escape. From his Brazilian plantation, Crusoe sets
out on an African voyage that ends in shipwreck; the sole survivor, Crusoe lives
his next 28 years on a deserted island.
Situated off the South American coast, Crusoes new home is a small hilly island
populated only by wild animals and birds. Crusoe is unfamiliar with most of the
terrains luxuriant vegetation, but he finds sugar cane and tobacco plants, melon
and grape vines, and citrus trees. On a journey to the far side of the island, he sees
a nearby land mass that he is unable to identify. In stark contrast to the teeming
city where Crusoe was born and raised, the island is an unspoiled paradise, an
example of untamed nature.