The village in the jungle Vol1 Leonard Woolf Books
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This book was digitized and reprinted from the collections of the University of California Libraries. It was produced from digital images created through the libraries’ mass digitization efforts. The digital images were cleaned and prepared for printing through automated processes. Despite the cleaning process, occasional flaws may still be present that were part of the original work itself, or introduced during digitization. This book and hundreds of thousands of others can be found online in the HathiTrust Digital Library at www.hathitrust.org.
The village in the jungle Vol1 Leonard Woolf Books
When the description says the book "may" include numerous typos, what it does not reveal is that the book DOES include at least twice, and often three times, on each full page of text a line break, the TITLE OF THE BOOK in capital letters, and the page number from the edition at the UC-Berkeley library from which it was scanned. I found these insertions so distracting that I immediately returned the book to Amazon and ordered a used copy of the out-of-print Oxford University Press edition from a different bookseller. I am deeply disappointed in Amazon for including such flawed produts among its offering.Product details
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Tags : The village in the jungle (Vol-1) [Leonard Woolf] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. This book was digitized and reprinted from the collections of the University of California Libraries. It was produced from digital images created through the libraries’ mass digitization efforts. The digital images were cleaned and prepared for printing through automated processes. Despite the cleaning process,Leonard Woolf,The village in the jungle (Vol-1),University of California Libraries,B0080EREHK
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The village in the jungle Vol1 Leonard Woolf Books Reviews
This is a great novel, one of the few that really enters into the life of the native villagers of Sri Lanka in the early 20th century (and before). It is very oppressive and dark, and captures a kind of inexorableness of both the surrounding jungle and the internal hates and loves of tightly bound village life. It perhaps assimilates too starkly the natives with the ambient natural world (they are likened to the animal realm from time to time), but then Woolf was a white colonial administrator (and the colonial administration doesn't come off all that well either). The darkness and oppression of the story are offset by the fabulous writing which gives the whole thing a kind of glow.
It is interesting that this novel has never achieved classic status, probably because there are no western heroes, and nothing really redemptive. But parts of it are in the same league as A Passage to India.
An engrossing tale, inspired by the author's time as assistant governor in the east of Sri Lanka. Set in a small village, it concerns the taciturn loner, Silindu, and his motherless twin daughters. Silindu is an outsider in his village, and prefers to spend his time away hunting in the jungle. But life is hard and desperately poor, and he finds himself at odds with the village headman, who has the power to make his life difficult...
Love, hatred, greed, plotting, religion, superstition all come into this tale; and over it all the British administration, whose taxes and permits make life that bit harder for the peasants.
Having recently visited this area of Sri Lanka, I really felt Woolf's writing brought the area to life ;
'The jungle surged forward over and blotted out the village up to the very walls of her hut...Its breath was hot and heavy...it closed with its shrubs and bushes and trees, with the impenetrable disorder of its thorns and its creepers, over the rice-fields and the tanks.'
In a short story, 'Pearls and Swine' which appears in my (Eland) edition, Woolf expresses some of his opinions on the shortcomings of colonial rule.
The Village in the Jungle is a thoroughly engaging novel, a story set in southern Ceylon (Sri Lanka) around 1910. The book is well written, with a good brisk pace and a suitably sized cast of characters, several of whom are fully developed, complex. As much as in any Jane Austen novel, the basic melodrama depends on the charms of two attractive sisters and the men who desire them. It's also a novel of manners, but here the manners are those of life in the jungle. Woolf was fascinated by the Sinhalese during his 7 years as a colonial administrator (1904-1911) in southern Ceylon, and he kept detailed notes of his observations as he moved about his district.
A Woolf-like magistrate appears in the novel, booking a self-confessed murderer from the jungle. The magistrate is shown in a flattering light he's intelligent and perceptive, speaking fluent Sinhalese. As the exhausted man sleeps in front of him, the magistrate asks his assistant's opinion of the case. His assistant replies that the jungle people are ignorant savages. Then the Woolf character says "I rather doubt it. You don't help the psychologist much. This man now I expect he's a quiet sort of man. All he wanted was to be left alone, poor devil." Psychologist! Woolf wrote this in 1912, the year he resigned from colonial service to marry Virginia Stephen, who encouraged him to write this book. Woolf and the other Apostles at Cambridge were early converts to Freud. The Hogarth Press published the first English translations of Freud's works.
I believe this book is the earliest literary work to break from the Victorian glorification of imperialism, trumpeted so successfully by Rudyard Kipling. Far from being 'the white man's burden,' colonialism is here just another burden on natives already struggling with plenty of troubles of their own. Woolf's jungle is Darwin's 'survival of the fittest' come to life, for the people as well as for the animals. The people are never far from starvation. "For the rule of the jungle is first fear... and behind the fear is always the hunger and the thirst, and behind the hunger and the thirst fear again." But Woolf incorporates another level as well, beyond the objective Darwinian reality. He shows the natives' feelings about the jungle, their behavioral adjustments their psychology! It's quite remarkable. And hugely successful.
This book must have had a big impact on Joyce Cary, who served as District Officer in Nigeria (1914-1920), and also came to see colonialism from the native's perspective. It's especially evident in "The African Witch" (1936). In "An American Visitor" (1933) the colonial administrator is determined not to allow Christian missionaries into the country, as they would only debase and destroy the philosophical underpinnings so crucial to maintaining the coherence of society. (It is extremely unfortunate that the British, trying to maintain their hold on Ceylon, deliberately set the Tamils and the Sinhalese against each other. The upshot was the brutal, incredibly destructive, civil war that lasted 26 years.)
everything else was just fine, the quality of the book, etc. At the time of purchase I also ordered 2 other books from separate sellers which arrived almost a week sooner. Oh well, great book, good condition!
The book begins with wonderful prose about the jungle. I bought it on my because other reviewers said the print was too small. I thought I could enlarge the print on the edition, but could not. I am searching for a paperback edition which I can read.
I have bought from a copy of leonard Woolf VILLAGE IN THE JUNGLE. It was meant as a present to a friend but it turns out to be a scanned copy with little connection with the original. The return menu also does not seem to work. I am seriously concerned about this kind of reproduction that amounts to fraud.
Professor Gananath Obeyesekere
Princeton University
Home 61 West 62nd street, #22A, NY, NY 10023
I read this book prior to a trip to Sri Lanka, so it was quite meaningful. Very well written. However the version I bought was a scanned copy of a library book from UC Berkeley. The image quality was poor and font was so small it was hard to read. Neither the font size nor the light scale could be adjusted which are two good reasons to read e-books in the first place. I won't fall for that again.
When the description says the book "may" include numerous typos, what it does not reveal is that the book DOES include at least twice, and often three times, on each full page of text a line break, the TITLE OF THE BOOK in capital letters, and the page number from the edition at the UC-Berkeley library from which it was scanned. I found these insertions so distracting that I immediately returned the book to and ordered a used copy of the out-of-print Oxford University Press edition from a different bookseller. I am deeply disappointed in for including such flawed produts among its offering.
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