The Reflection of Female Culture and Regional Culture in Joseph Conrad s Novels from the Perspective of Post-Colonialism

Authors

  • Naveed Ali Shah Assistant Professor, Department of English Sarhad University of Science & Information Technology, Peshawar, KP, Pakistan.
  • Muhammad Taimur Khan Lecturer, Department of management sciences and commerce Bacha khan university Charsadda, KP, Pakistan.
  • Shujaat Ali PhD Scholar, Department of English at Northern University, Nowshera, KP, Pakistan.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.56976/jsom.v5i1.392

Keywords:

Reflection, Female Culture, Regional Culture, Joseph Conrad s Novels, Post-Colonialism

Abstract

In this paper, the postcolonial female culture and regional culture in Conrad's works are analyzed from the perspective of postcolonialism, and Conrad's growth background and writing background are combined to understand. This study focuses on Conrad's depiction of women and regional culture in Lord Jim, A Stranger at Sea, and Heart of Darkness. It enables him to get rid of the traditional British writers' single narrative perspective, and depicts the cultural picture of the colonial expansion period from the cross-cultural perspective. The analysis of female culture and regional culture in his works will get unexpected results. This study is based on this perspective, through reading and consulting literature in-depth analysis, in order to be able to theoretically enrich the academic research on post-colonial literature, while promoting the relevant regional culture and the further development of female culture.

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Published

2026-01-24

How to Cite

Shah, N. A. ., Khan, M. T., & Ali, S. (2026). The Reflection of Female Culture and Regional Culture in Joseph Conrad s Novels from the Perspective of Post-Colonialism. Journal of Social and Organizational Matters, 5(1), 218–230. https://doi.org/10.56976/jsom.v5i1.392

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Section

Articles