Robinson Crusoe
Robinson
Crusoe[a] (/ˈkruːsoʊ/) is a novel
by Daniel Defoe,
first published on 25 April 1719. The first edition credited the work's
protagonist Robinson Crusoe as its author, leading many readers to believe he
was a real person and the book a travelogue
of true incidents.[1]
Epistolary, confessional,
and didactic
in form, the book is presented as an autobiography of the title character
(whose birth name is Robinson Kreutznaer)—a castaway who spends 28 years on a remote tropical desert
island near Trinidad, encountering cannibals, captives, and mutineers, before ultimately being rescued.
The story has been thought to be based on the life of Alexander
Selkirk, a Scottish castaway who lived for
four years on a Pacific island called "Más a Tierra", now part of Chile, which was renamed Robinson Crusoe Island in 1966.[2]
Despite
its simple narrative style, Robinson Crusoe was well received in the
literary world and is often credited as marking the beginning of realistic
fiction as a literary genre. It is generally seen as a contender for the first English
novel.[3] Before the end of 1719, the book had already run through
four editions, and it has gone on to become one of the most widely published
books in history, spawning so many imitations, not only in literature but also
in film, television and radio, that its name is used to define a genre, the Robinsonade.
Plot summary
Crusoe
(the family name corrupted from the German name "Kreutznaer") set
sail from Kingston upon Hull
on a sea voyage in August 1651, against the wishes of his parents, who wanted
him to pursue a career in law. After a tumultuous journey where his ship is
wrecked in a storm, his lust for the sea remains so strong that he sets out to
sea again. This journey, too, ends in disaster, as the ship is taken over by Salé pirates (the Salé
Rovers) and Crusoe is enslaved by a Moor. Two years later, he escapes in a boat with a boy named
Xury; a captain of a Portuguese
ship off the west coast of Africa rescues him. The ship is en route to Brazil. Crusoe sells Xury to the captain. With the captain's help,
Crusoe procures a plantation.
Years
later, Crusoe joins an expedition to bring slaves from Africa, but he is shipwrecked in a storm about forty miles out to
sea on an island (which he calls the Island of Despair) near the mouth of the Orinoco river on 30 September 1659.[4] He observes the latitude as 9 degrees and 22 minutes north.
He sees penguins and seals
on his island. As for his arrival there, only he and three animals, the
captain's dog and two cats, survive the shipwreck. Overcoming his despair, he
fetches arms, tools and other supplies from the ship before it breaks apart and
sinks. He builds a fenced-in habitat near a cave which he excavates. By making
marks in a wooden cross, he creates a calendar. By using tools salvaged from
the ship, and some which he makes himself, he hunts, grows barley and rice,
dries grapes to make raisins, learns to make pottery and raises goats. He also
adopts a small parrot. He reads the Bible and becomes religious, thanking God
for his fate in which nothing is missing but human society.
More
years pass and Crusoe discovers native cannibals, who occasionally visit the island to kill and eat
prisoners. At first he plans to kill them for committing an abomination but
later realizes he has no right to do so, as the cannibals do not knowingly
commit a crime. He dreams of obtaining one or two servants by freeing some
prisoners; when a prisoner escapes, Crusoe helps him, naming his new companion
"Friday" after the day of the week he appeared. Crusoe then
teaches him English and converts him to Christianity.
After
more natives arrive to partake in a cannibal feast, Crusoe and Friday kill most
of the natives and save two prisoners. One is Friday's father and the other is
a Spaniard, who informs Crusoe about other Spaniards shipwrecked on the
mainland. A plan is devised wherein the Spaniard would return to the mainland
with Friday's father and bring back the others, build a ship, and sail to a
Spanish port.
Before
the Spaniards return, an English ship appears; mutineers have commandeered the
vessel and intend to maroon their captain on the island. Crusoe and the ship's
captain strike a deal in which Crusoe helps the captain and the loyal sailors
retake the ship and leave the worst mutineers on the island. Before embarking
for England, Crusoe shows the mutineers how he survived on the island and
states that there will be more men coming. Crusoe leaves the island 19 December
1686 and arrives in England on 11 June 1687. He learns that his family believed
him dead; as a result, he was left nothing in his father's will. Crusoe departs
for Lisbon to reclaim the profits of his estate in Brazil, which has granted
him much wealth. In conclusion, he transports his wealth overland to England
from Portugal to avoid traveling by sea. Friday accompanies him and, en
route, they endure one last adventure together as they fight off famished
wolves while crossing the Pyrenees.
Characters
Robinson
Crusoe: The narrator of the novel who gets
shipwrecked.
Friday: Servant to Robinson Crusoe.
Xury: Former servant to Crusoe, helps him escape Sallee; is later sold to the Portuguese Captain.
The Widow: Friend to Robinson Crusoe. She looks over his assets while he is away.
Portuguese Sea Captain: Helps save Robinson Crusoe from slavery. Is very generous and close with Crusoe; helps him with his money and plantation.
Ismael: Secures Robinson Crusoe a boat for escaping Sallee.
The Spaniard: Rescued by Robinson Crusoe and helps him escape his island.
Robinson Crusoe's father: A merchant named Kreutznaer.
Friday: Servant to Robinson Crusoe.
Xury: Former servant to Crusoe, helps him escape Sallee; is later sold to the Portuguese Captain.
The Widow: Friend to Robinson Crusoe. She looks over his assets while he is away.
Portuguese Sea Captain: Helps save Robinson Crusoe from slavery. Is very generous and close with Crusoe; helps him with his money and plantation.
Ismael: Secures Robinson Crusoe a boat for escaping Sallee.
The Spaniard: Rescued by Robinson Crusoe and helps him escape his island.
Robinson Crusoe's father: A merchant named Kreutznaer.
Religion
Robinson
Crusoe was published in 1719 during the Enlightenment
period of the 18th century.
In the novel Crusoe sheds light on different aspects of Christianity and his beliefs. The book can be considered a spiritual autobiography as Crusoe's views on religion drastically change from the
start of his story and then the end. In the beginning of the book Crusoe is
concerned with sailing away from home, whereupon he meets violent storms at
sea. He promises to God that if he survived that storm he would be a dutiful Christian man and head home according to his parent's wishes.
However, when Crusoe survives the storm he decides to keep sailing and notes
that he could not fulfil the promises he had made during his turmoil.[5]
After
Robinson is shipwrecked on his island he begins to suffer from extreme
isolation. He turns to his animals to talk to, such as his parrot, but misses
human contact. He turns to God during his time of turmoil in search of solace
and guidance. He retrieves a bible from a ship that was washed along the shore
and begins to memorize verses. In times of trouble he would open the bible to a random
page where he would read a verse that he believed God had made him open and
read, and that would ease his mind. Therefore, during the time in which Crusoe
was shipwrecked he became very religious and often would turn to God for help.
When
Crusoe meets his servant Friday, he begins to teach him scripture and about Christianity. He tries to teach Friday to the
best of his ability about God and what Heaven and Hell are. His purpose is to
convert Friday into being a Christian and to his values and beliefs. “During
the long time that Friday has now been with me, and that he began to speak to
me, and understand me, I was not wanting to lay a foundation of religious
knowledge in his mind; particularly I ask'd him one time who made him?” [6]
Sources and real-life castaways
See also: Castaway
§ Real occurrences
There
were many stories of real-life castaways in Defoe's time. Most famously,
Defoe's suspected inspiration for Robinson Crusoe is thought to be
Scottish sailor, Alexander
Selkirk, who spent four years on the
uninhabited island of Más a Tierra
(renamed Robinson Crusoe Island in 1966)[2] in the Juan Fernández Islands off the Chilean coast.
Selkirk was rescued in 1709 by Woodes
Rogers during an English expedition that
led to the publication of Selkirk's adventures in both A
Voyage to the South Sea, and Round the World and A Cruising Voyage Around the World in 1712.
According to Tim Severin,
"Daniel Defoe, a secretive man, neither confirmed or denied that Selkirk
was the model for the hero of his book. Apparently written in six months or
less, Robinson Crusoe was a publishing phenomenon.[7]
The
author of Crusoe's Island, Andrew
Lambert states, "the ideas that a
single, real Crusoe is a 'false premise' because Crusoe's story is a complex
compound of all the other buccaneer survival stories."[8]
However, Robinson Crusoe is far from a copy of Rogers' account: Becky
Little argues three events that distinguish the two stories. Robinson Crusoe
was shipwrecked while Selkirk decided to leave his ship thus marooning himself;
the island Crusoe was shipwrecked on had already been inhabited, unlike the
solitary nature of Selkirk's adventures. The last and most crucial difference
between the two stories is Selkirk is a pirate, looting and raiding coastal
cities. "The economic and dynamic thrust of the book is completely alien
to what the buccaneers are doing," Lambert says. "The buccaneers just
want to capture some loot and come home and drink it all, and Crusoe isn’t
doing that at all. He's an economic imperialist. He's creating a world of trade
and profit."
Other
possible sources for the narrative include Ibn
Tufail's Hayy
ibn Yaqdhan, and Spanish sixteenth-century
sailor Pedro Serrano.
Ibn Tufail's Hayy ibn Yaqdhan is a twelfth-century philosophical novel
also set on a desert island
and translated from Arabic into Latin and English a number of times in the
half-century preceding Defoe's novel.[9][10][11][12]
Pedro
Luis Serrano was a Spanish sailor who was marooned for seven or eight years in
the sixteenth century on a small desert island after shipwrecking on a small
island in the Caribbean off the coast of Nicaragua in 1520s. He had no access
to fresh water and lived off the blood and flesh of sea turtles and birds. He
was quite a celebrity when he returned to Europe and before passing away, he
recorded the hardships suffered in documents that show the endless anguish and
suffering, the product of absolute abandonment to his fate, now held in the General Archive of the Indies, in Seville.
It is very likely that Defoe heard his story, 200 years old by then but still
very popular, in one of his visits to Spain before becoming a writer.
Yet
another source for Defoe's novel may have been the Robert Knox
account of his abduction by the King of Ceylon Rajasinha II of Kandy in 1659 in An Historical
Relation of the Island Ceylon.[13][14]
Tim
Severin's book Seeking Robinson Crusoe
(2002) unravels a much wider and more plausible range of potential sources of
inspiration, and concludes by identifying castaway surgeon Henry Pitman as the
most likely. An employee of the Duke
of Monmouth, Pitman played a part in the Monmouth Rebellion.
His short book about his desperate escape from a Caribbean penal colony,
followed by his shipwrecking and subsequent desert island misadventures, was
published by John Taylor of Paternoster
Row, London, whose son William Taylor later published Defoe's novel. Severin argues that since
Pitman appears to have lived in the lodgings above the father's publishing
house and that Defoe himself was a mercer in the area at the time, Defoe may
have met Pitman in person and learned of his experiences first-hand, or
possibly through submission of a draft.[15] Severin also discusses another publicised case of a
marooned man named only as Will, of the Miskito people of Central America, who may have led to the
depiction of Friday.[16]
Arthur
Wellesley Secord in his Studies in the Narrative Method of Defoe (1963:
21–111) analyses the composition of Robinson Crusoe and gives a list of
possible sources of the story, rejecting the common theory that the story of
Selkirk is Defoe's only source.
Reception and sequels
The
book was published on 25 April 1719. Before the end of the year, this first
volume had run through four editions.
By
the end of the nineteenth century, no book in the history of Western literature
had more editions, spin-offs and translations (even into languages such as Inuktitut, Coptic and Maltese) than Robinson Crusoe, with more than 700 such
alternative versions, including children's versions with pictures and no text.[17][18]
The
term "Robinsonade" was coined to describe the
genre of stories similar to Robinson Crusoe.
Defoe
went on to write a lesser-known sequel, The Farther
Adventures of Robinson Crusoe
(1719). It was intended to be the last part of his stories, according to the
original title page of the sequel's first edition, but a third book, Serious Reflections
During the Life and Surprising Adventures of Robinson Crusoe: With his Vision
of the Angelick World (1720),
was written.
Interpretations
Novelist
James
Joyce noted that the true symbol of the British
Empire is Robinson Crusoe, to whom he
ascribed stereotypical and somewhat hostile English racial characteristics:
"He is the true prototype of the British colonist. ... The whole
Anglo-Saxon spirit in Crusoe: the manly independence, the unconscious cruelty,
the persistence, the slow yet efficient intelligence, the sexual apathy, the
calculating taciturnity."[19] In a sense Crusoe attempts to replicate his society on the
island. This is achieved through the use of European technology, agriculture
and even a rudimentary political hierarchy. Several times in the novel Crusoe
refers to himself as the "king" of the island, whilst the captain
describes him as the "governor" to the mutineers. At the very end of
the novel the island is explicitly referred to as a "colony". The
idealised master-servant relationship Defoe depicts between Crusoe and Friday
can also be seen in terms of cultural imperialism. Crusoe represents the "enlightened" European
whilst Friday is the "savage" who can only be redeemed from his
barbarous way of life through assimilation into Crusoe's culture. Nonetheless
Defoe also takes the opportunity to criticise the historic Spanish conquest of South
America.
According
to J. P. Hunter, Robinson is not a hero but an everyman. He begins as a wanderer, aimless on a sea he does not
understand, and ends as a pilgrim,
crossing a final mountain to enter the promised
land. The book tells the story of how
Robinson becomes closer to God, not through listening to sermons in a church but through spending time alone amongst nature with only a Bible to read.
Conversely,
cultural critic and literary scholar Michael Gurnow views the novel from a Rousseauian perspective. In "'The Folly of Beginning a Work Before
We Count the Cost': Anarcho-Primitivism in Daniel Defoe's Robinson
Crusoe", the central character's movement from a primitive state to a more
civilized one is interpreted as Crusoe's denial of humanity's state
of nature.[20]
Robinson
Crusoe is filled with religious aspects.
Defoe was a Puritan
moralist and normally worked in the guide tradition, writing books on how to be
a good Puritan Christian, such as The New Family Instructor (1727) and Religious
Courtship (1722). While Robinson Crusoe is far more than a guide, it
shares many of the themes and theological and moral points of view.
"Crusoe" may have been taken from Timothy Cruso, a classmate of
Defoe's who had written guide books, including God the Guide of Youth
(1695), before dying at an early age—just eight years before Defoe wrote Robinson
Crusoe. Cruso would have been remembered by contemporaries and the
association with guide books is clear. It has even been speculated that God
the Guide of Youth inspired Robinson Crusoe because of a number of
passages in that work that are closely tied to the novel.[21] A leitmotif of the novel is the Christian notion of Providence, penitence and redemption.[22] Crusoe comes to repent of the follies of his youth. Defoe
also foregrounds this theme by arranging highly significant events in the novel
to occur on Crusoe's birthday. The denouement culminates not only in Crusoe's
deliverance from the island, but his spiritual deliverance, his acceptance of
Christian doctrine, and in his intuition of his own salvation.
When
confronted with the cannibals, Crusoe wrestles with the problem of cultural relativism.
Despite his disgust, he feels unjustified in holding the natives morally responsible
for a practice so deeply ingrained in their culture. Nevertheless, he retains
his belief in an absolute standard of morality; he regards cannibalism as a
"national crime" and forbids Friday from practising it.
Main article: Robinson Crusoe economy
In
classical,
neoclassical
and Austrian economics,
Crusoe is regularly used to illustrate the theory of production and choice in
the absence of trade, money and prices.[23] Crusoe must allocate effort between production and leisure
and must choose between alternative production possibilities to meet his needs.
The arrival of Friday is then used to illustrate the possibility of trade and
the gains that result.
Tim
Severin's book Seeking Robinson Crusoe
(2002) unravels a much wider range of potential sources of inspiration. Severin
concludes his investigations by stating that the real Robinson Crusoe figure
was Henry Pitman, a castaway who had been surgeon to the Duke of Monmouth. Pitman's short book about his desperate escape from a
Caribbean penal colony for his part in the Monmouth Rebellion,
his shipwrecking and subsequent desert island misadventures was published by J.
Taylor of Paternoster Street,
London, whose son William Taylor later published Defoe's novel. Severin argues that since
Pitman appears to have lived in the lodgings above the father's publishing
house and since Defoe was a mercer in the area at the time, Defoe may have met Pitman and
learned of his experiences as a castaway. If he did not meet Pitman, Severin
points out that Defoe, upon submitting even a draft of a novel about a castaway
to his publisher, would undoubtedly have learned about Pitman's book published
by his father, especially since the interesting castaway had previously lodged
with them at their former premises.
Severin
also provides evidence in his book that another publicised case[24] of a real-life marooned Miskito Central American man named only as Will may have caught
Defoe's attention, inspiring the depiction of Man Friday in his novel.
One day, about noon, going towards
my boat, I was exceedingly surprised with the print of a man's naked foot on
the shore, which was very plain to be seen on the sand.
—
Defoe's Robinson Crusoe, 1719
The
work has been variously read as an allegory for the development of civilisation;
as a manifesto of economic individualism; and as an expression of European
colonial desires. Significantly, it also shows the importance of repentance and
illustrates the strength of Defoe's religious convictions. Critics such as
Maximillian E. Novak support the connection between the religious and economic
themes within Robinson Crusoe, citing Defoe's religious ideology as the
influence for his portrayal of Crusoe's economic ideals and his support of the
individual. Within his article "Robinson Crusoe's 'Original Sin'",
Novak cites Ian Watt's
extensive research in Watt's book, Myths of Modern Individualism: Faust, Don
Quixote, Don Juan, Robinson Crusoe, in which Watt explores the impact that
several Romantic Era novels had against economic individualism, and the
reversal of those ideals that takes place within Robinson Crusoe.[25] In Tess Lewis's review, "The Heroes We Deserve",
of Ian Watt's article, she furthers Watt's argument with a development on
Defoe's intention as an author, "to use individualism to signify
nonconformity in religion and the admirable qualities of self-reliance"
(Lewis 678). This further supports the belief that Defoe used aspects of
spiritual autobiography in order to introduce the benefits of individualism to
a not entirely convinced religious community.[26] J. Paul Hunter has written extensively on the subject of Robinson
Crusoe as apparent spiritual autobiography, tracing the influence of
Defoe's Puritan ideology through Crusoe's narrative, and his acknowledgement of
human imperfection in pursuit of meaningful spiritual engagements—the cycle of
"repentance [and] deliverance."[27] This spiritual pattern and its episodic nature, as well as
the re-discovery of earlier female novelists, have kept Robinson Crusoe
from being classified as a novel, let alone the first novel written in English—despite the blurbs on some book covers. Early critics, such
as Robert Louis Stevenson, admired it, saying that the footprint scene in Crusoe
was one of the four greatest in English literature and most unforgettable; more
prosaically, Dr. Wesley Vernon has seen the origins of forensic
podiatry in this episode.[28] It has inspired a new genre, the Robinsonade, as works such as Johann
David Wyss' The Swiss Family Robinson (1812) adapt its premise and has provoked modern postcolonial responses, including J.
M. Coetzee's Foe
(1986) and Michel Tournier's
Vendredi ou les
Limbes du Pacifique (in
English, Friday, or, The Other Island) (1967). Two sequels followed,
Defoe's The Farther
Adventures of Robinson Crusoe
(1719) and his Serious reflections during the life and surprising adventures
of Robinson Crusoe: with his Vision of the angelick world (1720). Jonathan
Swift's Gulliver's Travels (1726) in part parodies Defoe's adventure novel.
Legacy
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Influence on language
The
book proved so popular that the names of the two main protagonists have entered
the language. During World War II,
people who decided to stay and hide in the ruins of the German-occupied city of Warsaw
for a period of three winter months, from October to January 1945, when they
were rescued by the Red Army,
were later called Robinson Crusoes of Warsaw (Robinsonowie warszawscy).[29] Robinson Crusoe usually referred to his servant as "my
man Friday", from which the term "Man
Friday" (or "Girl Friday")
originated.
Influence on literature
Robinson
Crusoe marked the beginning of realistic
fiction as a literary genre.[30] Its success led to many imitators, and castaway novels,
written by Ambrose Evans, Penelope
Aubin, and others, became quite popular
in Europe in the 18th and early 19th centuries.[31] Most of these have fallen into obscurity, but some became
established, including The Swiss Family Robinson, which borrowed Crusoe's first name for its title.
Jonathan
Swift's Gulliver's Travels, published seven years after Robinson Crusoe, may be
read as a systematic rebuttal of Defoe's optimistic account of human
capability. In The Unthinkable Swift: The Spontaneous Philosophy of a Church
of England Man, Warren Montag
argues that Swift was concerned about refuting the notion that the individual
precedes society, as Defoe's novel seems to suggest. In Treasure
Island, author Robert Louis Stevenson parodies Crusoe with the character of Ben Gunn, a friendly castaway who was marooned for many years, has a
wild appearance, dresses entirely in goat skin and constantly talks about
providence.
In
Jean-Jacques Rousseau's treatise on education, Emile, or on
Education, the one book the protagonist is
allowed to read before the age of twelve is Robinson Crusoe. Rousseau
wants Emile to identify himself as Crusoe so he can rely upon himself for all
of his needs. In Rousseau's view, Emile needs to imitate Crusoe's experience,
allowing necessity to determine what is to be learned and accomplished. This is
one of the main themes of Rousseau's educational model.
In
The Tale of Little
Pig Robinson, Beatrix
Potter directs the reader to Robinson
Crusoe for a detailed description of the island (the land of the Bong tree)
to which her eponymous hero moves. In Wilkie
Collins' most popular novel, The
Moonstone, one of the chief characters and
narrators, Gabriel Betteredge, has faith in all that Robinson Crusoe says and
uses the book for a sort of divination. He considers The Adventures of Robinson Crusoe the
finest book ever written, reads it over and over again, and considers a man but
poorly read if he had happened not to read the book.
French
novelist Michel Tournier
published Friday, or, The
Other Island (French Vendredi ou les Limbes
du Pacifique) in 1967. His novel explores themes including civilization
versus nature, the psychology of solitude, as well as death and sexuality in a
retelling of Defoe's Robinson Crusoe story. Tournier's Robinson chooses
to remain on the island, rejecting civilization when offered the chance to
escape 28 years after being shipwrecked. Likewise, in 1963, J. M. G. Le Clézio,
winner of the 2008 Nobel Prize in Literature, published the novel Le
Proces-Verbal. The book's epigraph
is a quote from Robinson Crusoe, and like Crusoe, Adam Pollo suffers
long periods of loneliness.
"Crusoe
in England", a 183-line poem by Elizabeth
Bishop, imagines Crusoe near the end of his
life, recalling his time of exile with a mixture of bemusement and regret.
J.
M. Coetzee's 1986 novel Foe
recounts the tale of Robinson Crusoe from the perspective of a woman named
Susan Barton.
Comics adaptations
The
story was also illustrated and published in comic book form by Classics Illustrated in 1943 and 1957. The much improved 1957 version was
inked/penciled by Sam Citron, who is most well known for his contributions to
the earlier issues of Superman.[32] British illustrator Reginald Ben Davis drew a female
version of the story titled Jill Crusoe, Castaway (1950-1959).[33]
Stage adaptations
A
pantomime version of Robinson Crusoe was staged at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1796, with Joseph
Grimaldi as Pierrot in the harlequinade. The piece was produced again in 1798, this time starring
Grimaldi as Clown.
In 1815, Grimaldi played Friday in another version of Robinson Crusoe.[34]
Jacques
Offenbach wrote an opéra
comique called Robinson Crusoé,
which was first performed at the Opéra-Comique in Paris on 23 November 1867. This was based on the British
pantomime version rather than the novel itself. The libretto was by Eugène
Cormon and Hector-Jonathan Crémieux.
There
have been a number of other stage adaptations, including those by Isaac
Pocock, Jim Helsinger and Steve Shaw and a
Musical by Victor Prince.
Film adaptations
There
is a 1927 silent film titled Robinson Crusoe. The Soviet 3D film Robinson Crusoe was produced in 1947. Luis
Buñuel directed Adventures of
Robinson Crusoe starring Dan
O'Herlihy, released in 1954. Walt
Disney later comedicized the novel with Lt. Robin Crusoe, U.S.N., featuring Dick
Van Dyke. In this version, Friday became a
beautiful woman, but named 'Wednesday' instead. Peter
O'Toole and Richard
Roundtree co-starred in a 1975 film Man Friday which sardonically portrayed Crusoe as incapable of seeing
his dark-skinned companion as anything but an inferior creature, while Friday
is more enlightened and sympathetic. In 1988, Aidan
Quinn portrayed Robinson Crusoe in the
film Crusoe.
A 1997 movie entitled Robinson Crusoe starred Pierce
Brosnan and received limited commercial
success. Variations on the theme include the 1954 Miss
Robin Crusoe, with a female castaway, played by Amanda
Blake, and a female Friday, and the 1964
film Robinson Crusoe on Mars, starring Paul
Mantee, with an alien Friday portrayed by Victor
Lundin and an added character played by Adam
West. The 2000 film Cast
Away, with Tom
Hanks as a FedEx employee stranded on an
Island for many years, also borrows much from the Robinson Crusoe story.
In
1964 a French film production crew made a 13-part serial of The
Adventures of Robinson Crusoe.
It starred Robert Hoffmann.
The black and white series was dubbed into English and German. In the UK, the
BBC broadcast it on numerous occasions between 1965 and 1977. In 1981 Czechoslovakian director and animator Stanislav Látal
made a version of the story under the name Adventures
of Robinson Crusoe, a Sailor from York
combining traditional and stop-motion animation. The movie was coproduced by
regional West Germany broadcaster Südwestfunk Baden-Baden.
TV adaptations
Two
2000s reality television
series, Expedition Robinson and Survivor,
have their contestants try to survive on an isolated location, usually an
island. The concept is influenced by Robinson Crusoe.
Inverted Crusoeism
The
term inverted Crusoeism is coined by J.
G. Ballard. The paradigm of Robinson Crusoe
has been a recurring topic in Ballard’s work[35].
Whereas the original Robinson Crusoe became a castaway against his own will, Ballard's protagonists often choose
to maroon themselves; hence inverted Crusoeism (e.g., Concrete
Island). The concept provides a reason as
to why people would deliberately maroon themselves on a remote island; in
Ballard’s work, becoming a castaway is as much a healing and empowering process
as an entrapping one, enabling people to discover a more meaningful and vital existence[36].
Musical references
Musician
Dean briefly mentions Crusoe in one of his music videos. In the
official music video for Instagram, there is a part when viewers hear Dean's
distorted voice; "Sometimes, I feel alone . . . I feel like I'm Robinson
Crusoe . . ."
Robinson
Crusoe is also mentioned in the song "I'm a Dog" by Canadian band Crash Test Dummies[37]. Written from the perspective of a dog puzzling over human
philosophy, the song has this stanza:
There's some debate about whether
instincts should be held in check
Well, I suppose that I'm a liberal in
this respect
I can't say I liked Robinson Crusoe
But
at least he didn't tie his dogs up at night
Editions
- The life and strange surprizing adventures of Robinson Crusoe: of York, mariner: who lived twenty eight years all alone in an un-inhabited island on the coast of America, near the mouth of the great river of Oroonoque; ... Written by himself., Early English Books Online, 1719. Oxford Text Archive
- Robinson Crusoe, Oneworld Classics 2008. ISBN 978-1-84749-012-4
- Robinson Crusoe, Penguin Classics 2003. ISBN 978-0-14-143982-2
- Robinson Crusoe, Oxford World's Classics 2007. ISBN 978-0-19-283342-6
- Robinson Crusoe, Bantam Classics
- Defoe, Daniel Robinson Crusoe, edited by Michael Shinagel (New York: Norton, 1994), ISBN 978-0393964523. Includes a selection of critical essays.
- Defoe, Daniel. Robinson Crusoe. Dover Publications, 1998.
- Life and Adventures of Robinson Crusoe Rand McNally & Company The Windermere Series 1916. No ISBN. Includes 7 Illustrations by Milo Winter
See also
From television and films
- Cast Away
- Gilligan's Island
- Swiss Family Robinson
- Lost in Space
- Crusoe
- Selkirk, the Real Robinson Crusoe
Novels
Stage adaptation
- Isaac Pocock (1782–1835)[38]
From real life
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