Bibtex export

 

@article{ Zadeh2013,
 title = {A Reading of Joseph Conrad's The Tale},
 author = {Zadeh, Mohammad Reza Modarres},
 journal = {International Letters of Social and Humanistic Sciences},
 number = {4},
 pages = {45-48},
 year = {2013},
 issn = {2300-2697},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.18052/www.scipress.com/ILSHS.4.45},
 abstract = {The Tale is a short story by Joseph Conrad. Typical of a Conrad story it is set at sea. The sea is symbolic of the unconscious and this story may be read as a story of the unconscious. On the outside, it seems simple; a man tells a woman a tale of the commanding officer of a patrol ship who gives false directions to another ship and sends it to its doom. In between the lines of the seemingly simple plot, however, can be read another tale; one which speaks of a human sea deeper than the sea of water; deeper, darker, and infinitely more mysterious. Man has navigated the sea of water but the unfathomed sea of his own being remains, for the most part, undiscovered. This is a sea different from the sea of this world and Conrad sets sail on it by telling a tale from another world. Sailing with Conrad, the reader can look out on the infinite vastness and try to form a picture of the infinite depth of a sea which is not visible to the human eye.},
}