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The Coral Island

The Coral Island: A Tale of the Pacific Ocean (1857) is a novel written by Scottish author R. M. Ballantyne. One of the first works of juvenile fiction to feature exclusively juvenile heroes, the story relates the adventures of three boys marooned on a South Pacific island, the only survivors of a shipwreck.

The Coral Island
Title page, illustrated 1893 edition of The Coral Island
AuthorR. M. Ballantyne
LanguageEnglish
GenreAdventure novel
PublisherT. Nelson & Sons
Publication date
1857
Media typePrint (Hardback & paperback)
TextThe Coral Island at Wikisource

A typical Robinsonade – a genre of fiction inspired by Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe – and one of the most popular of its type, the book first went on sale in late 1857 and has never been out of print. Among the novel's major themes are the civilising effect of Christianity, 19th-century imperialism in the South Pacific, and the importance of hierarchy and leadership. It was the inspiration for William Golding's dystopian novel Lord of the Flies (1954), which inverted the morality of The Coral Island; in Ballantyne's story the children encounter evil, but in Lord of the Flies evil is within them.

In the early 20th century, the novel was considered a classic for primary school children in the UK, and in the United States it was a staple of high-school suggested reading lists. Modern critics consider the book's worldview to be dated and imperialist, but although less popular today, The Coral Island was adapted into a four-part children's television drama broadcast by ITV in 2000.

Background edit

Biographical background and publication edit

Born in Edinburgh in 1825, and raised there, Ballantyne was the ninth of ten children and the youngest son. Tutored by his mother and sisters, his only formal education was a brief period at Edinburgh Academy in 1835–37. At the age of 16 he travelled to Canada, where he spent five years working for the Hudson's Bay Company, trading with the First Nations for furs.[1] He returned to Scotland in 1847 and for some years worked for the publisher Messrs Constable,[2] first as a clerk[1] and then as a partner in the business.[3] During his time in Canada he had helped to pass the time by writing long letters to his mother – to which he attributed "whatever small amount of facility in composition [he] may have acquired"[4] – and began his first book.[5] Ballantyne's Canadian experiences formed the basis of his first novel, The Young Fur Traders, published in 1856,[1] the year he decided to become a full-time writer and embarked on the adventure stories for the young with which his name is popularly associated.[2]

Ballantyne never visited the coral islands of the South Pacific, relying instead on the accounts of others that were then beginning to emerge in Britain, which he exaggerated for theatrical effect by including "plenty of gore and violence meant to titillate his juvenile readership".[6] His ignorance of the South Pacific caused him to erroneously describe coconuts as being soft and easily opened; a stickler for accuracy, he resolved that in future, whenever possible, he would write only about things he had personal experience of.[7] Ballantyne wrote The Coral Island while staying in a house on the Burntisland seafront opposite Edinburgh on the Firth of Forth in Fife. According to Ballantyne biographer Eric Quayle he borrowed extensively from an 1852 novel by the American author James F. Bowman, The Island Home.[8] He also borrowed from John Williams's Narrative of Missionary Enterprises (1837), to the extent that cultural historian Rod Edmond has suggested that Ballantyne must have written one chapter of The Coral Island with Williams's book open in front of him, so similar is the text.[9] Edmond describes the novel as "a fruit cocktail of other writing about the Pacific",[10] adding that "by modern standards Ballantyne's plagiarism in The Coral Island is startling".[11]

Although the first edition is dated 1858 it was on sale in bookshops from early December 1857; dating books forward was a common practice at the time, especially during the Christmas period,[12] to "preserve their newness" into the new year.[13] The Coral Island is Ballantyne's second novel,[14][a] and has never been out of print.[15] He was an exceedingly prolific author who wrote more than 100 books in his 40-year career.[16] According to professor and author John Rennie Short, Ballantyne had a "deep religious conviction", and felt it his duty to educate Victorian middle-class boys – his target audience – in "codes of honour, decency, and religiosity".[17]

The first edition of The Coral Island was published by T. Nelson & Sons, who in common with many other publishers of the time had a policy when accepting a manuscript of buying the copyright from the author rather than paying royalties; as a result, authors generally did not receive any income from the sale of subsequent editions.[18][b] Ballantyne received between £50 and £60,[20] equivalent to about £6500 as of 2017,[c] but when the novel's popularity became evident and the number of editions increased he tried unsuccessfully to buy back the copyright. He wrote bitterly to Nelsons in 1893 about the copyrights they held on his books while he had earned nothing: "for thirty-eight years [you have] reaped the whole profits".[22]

The Coral Island – still considered a classic – was republished by Penguin Books in 1995, in their Popular Classics series.[8]

Literary and historical context edit

Published during the "first golden age of children's fiction",[12] The Coral Island began a trend in boys' fiction by using boys as the main characters, a device now commonplace in the genre.[23] It preserves, according to literary critic Minnie Singh, the moralizing aspects of didactic texts, but does so (and in this regard it is a "founding text") by the "congruence of subject and implied reader": the story is about boys and written retrospectively as though by a boy, for an audience of boys.[23]

According to literary critic Frank Kermode, The Coral Island "could be used as a document in the history of ideas".[24] A scientific and social background for the novel is found in Darwinism, of the natural and the social kind. For instance, although The Coral Island was published a year before Origin of Species (whose ideas were already being circulated and discussed widely), Charles Darwin's 1842 The Structure and Distribution of Coral Reefs was one of the best-known contemporary accounts of the growth of coral.[25] Ballantyne had been reading books by Darwin and by his rival Alfred Russel Wallace;[12] in later publications he also acknowledged the naturalist Henry Ogg Forbes.[26] The interest in evolutionary theory was reflected in much contemporary popular literature,[27] and social Darwinism was an important factor contributing to the world view of the Victorians and their empire building.[28]

Plot summary edit

The story is written as a first person narrative from the perspective of 15-year-old Ralph Rover, one of three boys shipwrecked on the coral reef of a large but uninhabited Polynesian island. Ralph tells the story retrospectively, looking back on his boyhood adventure: "I was a boy when I went through the wonderful adventures herein set down. With the memory of my boyish feelings strong upon me, I present my book especially to boys, in the earnest hope that they may derive valuable information, much pleasure, great profit, and unbounded amusement from its pages."[29]

 
Jack, Ralph, and Peterkin after reaching the island, from an 1884 edition of the novel

The account starts briskly; only four pages are devoted to Ralph's early life and a further fourteen to his voyage to the Pacific Ocean on board the Arrow. He and his two companions – 18-year-old Jack Martin and 13-year-old Peterkin Gay – are the sole survivors of the shipwreck. The narrative is in two parts. The first describes how the boys feed themselves, what they drink, the clothing and shelter they fashion, and how they cope with having to rely on their own resources. The second half of the novel is more action-packed, featuring conflicts with pirates, fighting between the native Polynesians, and the conversion efforts of Christian missionaries.

Fruit, fish and wild pigs provide plentiful food, and at first the boys' life on the island is idyllic. They build a shelter and construct a small boat using their only possessions: a broken telescope, an iron-bound oar, and a small axe. Their first contact with other humans comes after several months when they observe two large outrigger canoes in the distance, one pursued by the other. The two groups of Polynesians disembark on the beach and engage in battle; the victors take fifteen prisoners and kill and eat one immediately. But when they threaten to kill one of the three women captured, along with two children, the boys intervene to defeat the pursuers, earning them the gratitude of the chief, Tararo. The next morning they prevent another act of cannibalism. The natives leave, and the boys are alone once more.

More unwelcome visitors then arrive in the shape of British pirates, who make a living by trading or stealing sandalwood. The three boys hide in a cave, but Ralph is captured when he ventures out to see if the intruders have left and is taken on board the pirate schooner. He strikes up a friendship with one of the crew, Bloody Bill, and when the ship calls at the island of Emo to trade for more wood Ralph experiences many facets of the island's culture: the popular sport of surfing, the sacrificing of babies to eel gods, rape, and cannibalism.

 
Ralph and Bloody Bill making their escape on board the pirate schooner, from an 1884 edition of the novel

Rising tensions result in the inhabitants attacking the pirates, leaving only Ralph and Bloody Bill alive. The pair succeed in making their escape in the schooner, but Bill is mortally wounded. He makes a death-bed repentance for his evil life, leaving Ralph to sail back to the Coral Island alone, where he is reunited with his friends.

The three boys sail to the island of Mango, where a missionary has converted some of the population to Christianity. There they once again meet Tararo, whose daughter Avatea wishes to become a Christian against her father's wishes. The boys attempt to take Avatea in a small boat to a nearby island the chief of which has been converted, but en route they are overtaken by one of Tararo's war canoes and taken prisoner. They are released a month later after the arrival of another missionary, and Tararo's conversion to Christianity. The "false gods"[30] of Mango are consigned to the flames, and the boys set sail for home, older and wiser. They return as adults for another adventure in Ballantyne's 1861 novel The Gorilla Hunters, a sequel to The Coral Island.[31][32]

Genre and style edit

All Ballantyne's novels are, in his own words, "adventure stories for young folks", and The Coral Island is no exception.[17] It is a Robinsonade, a genre of fiction inspired by Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe (1719),[33] one of the most popular of its type,[6] and one of the first works of juvenile fiction to feature exclusively juvenile heroes.[23][34] Susan Maher, professor of English, notes that, in comparison to Robinson Crusoe, such books generally replaced some of the original's romance with a "pedestrian realism", exemplified by works such as The Coral Island and Frederick Marryat's 1841 novel Masterman Ready, or the Wreck of the Pacific.[35] Romance, with its attention to character development, was only restored to the genre of boys' fiction with Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island argues literary critic Lisa Honaker. The Coral Island, for all its adventure, is greatly occupied with the realism of domestic fiction (the domain of the realist novel); Ballantyne devotes about a third of the book to descriptions of the boys' living arrangements.[31] The book exhibits a "light-hearted confidence" in its description of an adventure that was above all fun.[36] As Ralph says in his preface: "If there is any boy or man who loves to be melancholy and morose, and who cannot enter with kindly sympathy into the regions of fun, let me seriously advise him to shut my book and put it away. It is not meant for him."[29] Professor of English M. Daphne Kutzer has observed that "the swift movement of the story from coastal England to exotic Pacific island is similar to the swift movement from the real world to the fantastic in children's fantasy".[37]

To a modern reader, Ballantyne's books can seem overly concerned with accounts of flora and fauna,[38] an "ethnographic gloss" intended to suggest that their settings are real places offering adventures to those who can reach them.[37] They can also seem "obtrusively pious",[38] but, according to John Rennie Short, the moral tone of Ballantyne's writing is compensated for by his ability to tell a "cracking good yarn in an accessible and well-fashioned prose style".[17]

Themes edit

The major themes of the novel revolve around the influence of Christianity, the importance of social hierarchies, and the inherent superiority of civilised Europeans over the South Sea islanders; Martine Dutheil, professor of English, considers the novel "a key text mapping out colonial relations in the Victorian period".[8] The basic subject of the novel is popular and widespread: "castaway children assuming adult responsibilities without adult supervision", and The Coral Island is considered the classic example of such a book.[39]

I saw that these inhuman monsters were actually launching their canoe over the living bodies of their victims. But there was no pity in the breasts of these men. Forward they went in ruthless indifference, shouting as they went, while high above their voices rang the dying shrieks of those wretched creatures as, one after another, the ponderous canoe passed over them, burst the eyeballs from their sockets, and sent the life-blood gushing from their mouths. Oh reader, this is no fiction! I would not, for the sake of thrilling you with horror, invent so terrible a scene. It was witnessed. It is true – true as that accursed sin which has rendered the human heart capable of such diabolical enormities![40]

The supposed civilising influence of missionaries in spreading Christianity among the natives of the South Seas is an important theme of the second half of the story;[16] as Jack remarks to Peterkin, "all the natives of the South Sea Islands are fierce cannibals, and they have little respect for strangers".[41] Modern critics view this aspect of the novel less benevolently; Jerry Phillips, in a 1995 article, sees in The Coral Island the "perfect realiz[ation]" of "the official discourse of 19th century Pacific imperialism", which he argues was "obsessed with the purity of God, Trade, and the Nation."[42]

The importance of hierarchy and leadership is also a significant element. The overarching hierarchy of race is informed by Victorian concepts, influenced by the new theories of evolution proposed by Darwin and others. In morals and culture, the natives are placed lower on the evolutionary ladder than are Europeans, as is evidenced in the battle over the native woman Avatea, which pits "the forces of civilization versus the forces of cannibalism".[43] Another hierarchy is seen in the organisation of the boys. Although Jack, Ralph and Peterkin each have a say in how they should organise themselves, ultimately the younger boys defer to Jack,[44] "a natural leader",[39] particularly in a crisis, forming a natural hierarchy. The pirates also have a hierarchy, but one without democracy, and as a consequence are wiped out. The hierarchy of the natives is imposed by savagery. Ballantyne's message is that leaders should be respected by those they lead, and govern with their consent.[44] This educational message is especially appropriate considering Ballantyne's adolescent audience, "the future rulers of the world".[35]

Modern critics find darker undertones in the novel. In an essay published in College English in 2001, Martine Dutheil states that The Coral Island can be thought of as epitomising a move away from "the confidence and optimism of the early Victorian proponents of British imperialism" toward "self-consciousness and anxiety about colonial domination". She locates this anxiety in what she calls the "rhetoric of excess" that features in the descriptions of cannibalism, and especially in the accounts of Fijian savagery provided by Bloody Bill (most notably that of the sacrifice of children to the eel gods) and the missionary, a representative of the London Missionary Society, an "emblematic figure of colonial fiction".[8] Others have also linked popular boys' fiction of the period with imperialism; Joseph Bristow's Empire Boys (1991) claimed to see an "'imperialist manhood,' which shaped British attitudes towards empire and masculinity."[45] The novel's portrayal of Pacific culture and the effects of colonisation are analyzed in studies such as Brian Street's The Savage in Literature: Representations of 'primitive society in English Fiction (1975)[46] and Rod Edmond's Representing the South Pacific: Colonial Discourse from Cook to Gauguin (1998).[47][48] The domination imposed by "geographical mapping of a territory and policing of its native inhabitants" is an important theme in the novel both specifically and in general, in the topography of the island as mapped by the boys and the South Pacific's "eventual subjugation and conversion to Christianity", a topic continued in Stevenson's Treasure Island.[49]

The exploration of the relationship between nature and evangelical Christianity is another typically Victorian theme. Coral connects the two ideas. Literary critic Katharine Anderson explains that coral jewellery, popular in the period, had a "pious significance".[d] The "enchanted garden" of coral the boys discover at the bottom of their island's lagoon is suggestive of "missionary encounters with the societies of the Pacific Island".[25] In Victorian society coral had been given an "evangelical framing", and the little "coral insect" responsible for building coral reefs[e] mirrored the "child reader's productive capacity as a fundraiser for the missionary cause"; literary critic Michelle Elleray discusses numerous children's books from the early to mid-19th century, including The Coral Island, in which coral plays such an educational role.[54]

The novel's setting provides the backdrop for a meditation in the style of Jean-Jacques Rousseau, who promoted an educational setting in which lessons are provided by direct interactions with the natural world rather than by books and coercive teachers.[55] Singh points out that Rousseau, in Emile, or On Education, promotes the reading and even imitation of Robinson Crusoe;[23] literary critic Fiona McCulloch argues that the unmediated knowledge the boys gain on their coral island resembles the "direct language for children" Rousseau advocates in Emile.[12]

Critical reception edit

The Coral Island was an almost instant success, and was translated into almost every European language within fifty years of its publication.[56] It was widely admired by its contemporary readers, although modern critics view the text as featuring "dated colonialist themes and arguably racist undertones".[6] Ballantyne's blend of blood-thirsty adventure and pious imperialism appealed not just to his target juvenile audience but also to their parents and teachers.[57] He is today mainly remembered for The Coral Island, to the exclusion of much of his other work.[58]

The novel was still considered a classic for English primary school children in the early 20th century.[59] In the United States it was long a staple of suggested reading lists for high-school students; such a list, discussed in a 1915 article in The English Journal, recommends the novel in the category "Stories for Boys in Easy Style".[60] A simplified adaptation of the book was recommended in the 1950s for American 12–14 year olds.[61][62] Although mostly neglected by modern scholars[26] and generally considered to be dated in many aspects, in 2006 it was voted one of the top twenty Scottish novels at the 15th International World Wide Web Conference.[63]

Influence edit

Robert Louis Stevenson's 1882 novel Treasure Island was in part inspired by The Coral Island,[64] which he admired for its "better qualities",[6] as was J. M. Barrie's character Peter Pan; both Stevenson and Barrie had been "fervent boy readers" of the novel.[65] Novelist G. A. Henty was also influenced by Ballantyne's audience-friendly method of didactism.[23]

William Golding's 1954 novel Lord of the Flies was written as a counterpoint to (or even a parody of)[66] The Coral Island,[67] and Golding makes explicit references to it. At the end of the novel, for instance, one of the naval officers who rescues the children mentions the book, commenting on the hunt for one of their number, Ralph, as a "jolly good show. Like the Coral Island".[68] Jack also makes an appearance in Lord of the Flies as Jack Merridew, representing the irrational nature of the boys. Indeed, Golding's three central characters – Ralph, Piggy and Jack – are caricatures of Ballantyne's heroes.[23] Despite having enjoyed The Coral Island many times as a child, Golding strongly disagreed with the views that it espoused, and in contrast Lord of the Flies depicts the English boys as savages themselves,[67] who forget more than they learn, unlike Ballantyne's boys.[16] Golding described the relationship between the two books by saying that The Coral Island "rotted to compost" in his mind, and in the compost "a new myth put down roots".[67] Neither is the idyllic nature of Ballantyne's coral island to be found on Stevenson's treasure island, which is unsuitable for settlement "but exists merely as a site from which to excavate treasure, a view consistent with the late-Victorian imperial mission" according to Honaker.[31]

Television adaptations edit

The Coral Island was adapted into a children's television series in a joint venture between Thames Television and the Australian Broadcasting Corporation in 1980, first shown on Australian and British television in 1983.[69] It was also adapted into a four-part children's television drama by Zenith Productions, broadcast by ITV in 2000.[70]

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The Coral Island is Ballantyne's third book, but his first, Hudson's Bay; or, Every-day Life in the Wilds of North America (1848) is a work of non-fiction.[14]
  2. ^ It was not until the 1880s that the modern system of paying authors an agreed percentage of the retail price of every book sold became commonplace in Britain.[19]
  3. ^ Calculated using the Bank of England's UK price index.[21]
  4. ^ The Victorian love of coral jewellery was at its height from the 1840s to the 1850s, perhaps prompted by the coral ornaments presented by her husband to his royal bride, the Duchess d'Aumale, at their wedding in Naples[50][51] in 1844.[52]
  5. ^ "Coral insect" was a term commonly used in Ballantyne's time to describe the coral polyps the remains of which form the coral; they were not considered to be literally insects.[53]

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c Rennie, Neil (2004), "Ballantyne, Robert Michael (1825–1894)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.), Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/1232, retrieved 17 December 2013 (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  2. ^ a b "Obituary", The Times, no. 34184, p. 5, 10 February 1894, retrieved 17 December 2013
  3. ^ Ballantyne (2004), p. 6
  4. ^ Ballantyne (2004), p. 4
  5. ^ Ballantyne (2004), p. 5
  6. ^ a b c d , Children's Literature Review, January 2009, archived from the original on 10 June 2014, retrieved 4 May 2012
  7. ^ Tucker (1990), pp. 167–168
  8. ^ a b c d Dutheil, Martine Hennard (2001), "The Representation of the Cannibal in Ballantyne's The Coral Island: Colonial Anxieties in Victorian Popular Fiction", College Literature, 28 (1): 105–122, JSTOR 25112562
  9. ^ Edmond (1997), p. 147
  10. ^ Edmond (1997), p. 146
  11. ^ Edmond (1997), p. 148
  12. ^ a b c d McCulloch, Fiona (2000), "'The Broken Telescope': Misrepresentation in The Coral Island", Children's Literature Association Quarterly, 25 (3): 137–145, doi:10.1353/chq.0.1401, S2CID 143981168
  13. ^ Sammons (2004), p. xviii
  14. ^ a b Cox, Michael; Riches, Christopher (2012), "Ballantyne, R. M. [Robert Michael Ballantyne] (1825–1894) Scottish novelist", A Dictionary of Writers and their Works (online ed.), Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/acref/9780199585052.001.0001, ISBN 9780199585052
  15. ^ Jolly, Roslyn (2006), "Ebb Tide and The Coral Island", Scottish Studies Review, 7: 79–91[dead link]
  16. ^ a b c Townsend (1974), pp. 61–62
  17. ^ a b c Short (2002), p. 163
  18. ^ Finkelstein & McCleery (2012), p. 76
  19. ^ Finkelstein & McCleery (2012), p. 80
  20. ^ Potter (2007), p. 359
  21. ^ , Bank of England, archived from the original on 22 November 2016, retrieved 29 September 2018
  22. ^ Ward (2007), p. 410
  23. ^ a b c d e f Singh, Minnie (1997), "The Government of Boys: Golding's Lord of the Flies and Ballantyne's Coral Island", Children's Literature, 25: 205–213, doi:10.1353/chl.0.0478, S2CID 144319352
  24. ^ Kermode (1962), p. 203
  25. ^ a b Anderson, Katharine (2008), "Coral Jewellery", Victorian Review, 34 (1): 47–52, doi:10.1353/vcr.2008.0008, JSTOR 41220397, S2CID 201782824
  26. ^ a b Miller, John (2008), "Adventures in the Volcano's Throat: Tropical Landscape and Bodily Horror in R. M. Ballantyne's Blown to Bits", Victorian Review, 34 (1): 115–130, doi:10.1353/vcr.2008.0021, JSTOR 41220406, S2CID 162508944
  27. ^ Hannabuss, Stuart (1995), "Moral Islands: A Study of Robert Michael Ballantyne, Writer for Children", Scottish Literary Journal, 22 (2): 29–40
  28. ^ Brantlinger, Patrick (1985), "Victorians and Africans: The Genealogy of the Myth of the Dark Continent", Critical Inquiry, 12 (1): 166–203, doi:10.1086/448326, JSTOR 1343467, S2CID 161311164
  29. ^ a b Ballantyne (1911), Preface
  30. ^ Ballantyne (1911), p. 332
  31. ^ a b c Honaker, Lisa (2004), ""One Man to Rely On": Long John Silver and the Shifting Character of Victorian Boys' Fiction", Journal of Narrative Theory, 34 (1): 27–53, doi:10.1353/jnt.2004.0003, JSTOR 30225794, S2CID 162220139
  32. ^ MacKenzie (1989), p. 158
  33. ^ Mathison (2008), p. 173
  34. ^ Phillips (1996), p. 36
  35. ^ a b Maher, Susan Naramore (1988), "Recasting Crusoe: Frederick Marryat, R. M. Ballantyne and the Nineteenth-Century Robinsonade", Children's Literature Association Quarterly, 13 (4): 169–175, doi:10.1353/chq.0.0620, S2CID 144122068
  36. ^ Phillips (1996), p. 38
  37. ^ a b Kutzer (2000), p. 2
  38. ^ a b Lessing & Ousby (1993), p. 54
  39. ^ a b Niemeyer, Carl (1961), "The Coral Island Revisited", College English, 22 (44): 241–245, doi:10.2307/373028, JSTOR 373028
  40. ^ Ballantyne (1911), p. 245
  41. ^ Ballantyne (1911), p. 172
  42. ^ Phillips, Jerry (1995), "Narrative, Adventure, and Schizophrenia: From Smollett's Roderick Random to Melville's Omoo", Journal of Narrative Technique, 25 (2): 177–201, JSTOR 30225966
  43. ^ Kutzer (2000), p. 6
  44. ^ a b Kutzer (2000), pp. 2–3
  45. ^ August, E. R.; Brake, Laurel (1993), "Rev. of Joseph Bristow, Empire Boys: Adventures in a Man's World", Victorian Periodicals Review, 26 (4): 235, JSTOR 20082717
  46. ^ Korg, Jacob (1976), "Rev. of Brian Street, The Savage in Literature: Representations of 'Primitive' Society in English Fiction, 1858–1920", Nineteenth-Century Fiction, 31 (1): 118–119, doi:10.2307/2933323, JSTOR 2933323
  47. ^ Hanlon, David; Edmond, Rod (1999), "Rev. of Rod Edmond, Representing the South Pacific: Colonial Discourse from Cook to Gauguin", American Historical Review, 104 (4): 1261–1262, doi:10.2307/2649581, JSTOR 2649581, S2CID 162306632, from the original on 20 July 2021, retrieved 14 January 2020
  48. ^ Kitalong, Karla Saari; Emond, Rod (1999–2000), "Rev. of Rod Emond, Representing the South Pacific: Colonial Discourse from Cook to Gauguin", Pacific Affairs, 72 (4): 623–625, doi:10.2307/2672435, JSTOR 2672435
  49. ^ Mathison (2008), p. 178
  50. ^ Flower & Langley-Levy Moore (2002), p. 18
  51. ^ Anderson, Katharine (Spring 2008), "Coral Jewellery", Victorian Review, 34 (1): 47–52, doi:10.1353/vcr.2008.0008, JSTOR 41220397, S2CID 201782824
  52. ^ "Marriage of the Duke D'Aumale", The Times, no. 18787, p. 5, 6 December 1844, retrieved 17 January 2014
  53. ^ Darwin (2009), p. 4
  54. ^ Elleray, M. (2010). "Little Builders: Coral Insects, Missionary Culture, and the Victorian Child". Victorian Literature and Culture. 39: 223. doi:10.1017/S1060150310000367. S2CID 162940808.
  55. ^ Ornstein (2012), pp. 103–105
  56. ^ Carpenter & Prichard (1984), p. 131
  57. ^ Miller, John William (25 February 2008), "The Coral Island", The Literary Encyclopedia, from the original on 20 July 2021, retrieved 27 June 2013
  58. ^ Forman, Ross G. (1999), "When Britons Brave Brazil: British Imperialism and the Adventure Tale in Latin America, 1850–1918", Victorian Studies, 42 (3): 454–487, doi:10.2979/VIC.1999.42.3.455, JSTOR 3828976, S2CID 144905933
  59. ^ Marsh, Jackie (2004), "The Primary Canon: A Critical Review", British Journal of Educational Studies, 52 (3): 246–262, doi:10.1111/j.1467-8527.2004.00266.x, JSTOR 1556055, S2CID 144035337
  60. ^ Herzberg, Max J. (1915), "Supplementary Reading for High-School Pupils", English Journal, 4 (6): 373–382, doi:10.2307/801636, JSTOR 801636
  61. ^ Assuma, Daniel J. (1953), "A List of Simplified Classics", College English, 42 (2): 94–96, doi:10.2307/808695, JSTOR 808695
  62. ^ Blair, Glenn M. (1955), "Reading Materials for Pupils with Reading Disabilities", The High School Journal, 39 (1): 14–21, JSTOR 40363447
  63. ^ "Top twenty Scottish novels", WWW2006, from the original on 14 March 2012, retrieved 4 May 2012
  64. ^ Brantlinger (2009), p. 33
  65. ^ O'Sullivan (2010), p. 37
  66. ^ McNamara, Eugene (1965), "Holden as Novelist", English Journal, 54 (3): 166–170, doi:10.2307/811334, JSTOR 811334
  67. ^ a b c Kundu (2006), p. 219
  68. ^ Reiff (2010), p. 93
  69. ^ , British Film Institute, archived from the original on 7 February 2009, retrieved 10 September 2012
  70. ^ , British Film Institute, archived from the original on 21 January 2009, retrieved 10 September 2012

Bibliography edit

  • Ballantyne, R. M. (1911) [1858], The Coral Island: A Tale of the Pacific Ocean, Thomas Nelson and Sons, OCLC 540728645
  • Ballantyne, R. M. (2004) [1893], Personal Reminiscences in Book Making, Kessinger Publishing, ISBN 978-1-4191-4102-7
  • Brantlinger, Patrick (2009), Victorian Literature and Postcolonial Studies, Edinburgh University Press, ISBN 978-0-7486-3304-3
  • Carpenter, Humphrey; Prichard, Mari (1984), The Oxford Companion to Children's Literature, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-211582-9
  • Darwin, Charles (2009) [1842], The Structure and Formation of Coral Reefs, MobileReference, ISBN 978-1-60501-648-1
  • Edmond, Rod (1997), Representing the South Pacific: Colonial Discourse from Cook to Gauguin, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-55054-3
  • Finkelstein, David; McCleery, Alistair (2012), An Introduction to Book History, Routledge, ISBN 978-1-136-51591-0
  • Flower, Margaret; Langley-Levy Moore, Doris (2002), Victorian Jewellery, Courier Dove, ISBN 978-0-486-42230-5
  • Kermode, Frank (1962), "William Golding", Puzzles and Epiphanies: Essays and Reviews 1958–1961, Routledge and Kegan Paul, pp. 198–213
  • Kundu, Rama (2006), New Perspectives on British Authors: From William Shakespeare to Graham Greene, Sarup & Sons, ISBN 978-81-7625-690-2
  • Kutzer, M. Daphne (2000), Empire's Children: Empire and Imperialism in Classic British Children's Books, Routledge, ISBN 978-0-8153-3491-0
  • Lessing, Doris; Ousby, Ian (1993), The Cambridge Guide to Literature in English (2nd ed.), Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-44086-8
  • MacKenzie, John M. (1989), "Hunting and the Natural World in Juvenile Literature", in Richards, Jeffrey (ed.), Imperialism and Juvenile Literature, Manchester University Press, ISBN 978-0-7190-2420-7
  • Mathison, Ymitr (2008), "Maps, Pirates, and Treasure: The Commodification of Imperialism in Nineteenth-Century Boys' Adventure Fiction", in Denisoff, Dennis (ed.), The Nineteenth-Century Child and the Rise of Consumer Culture, Ashgate, pp. 173–188, ISBN 978-0-7546-6156-6
  • Ornstein, Allan C. (2012), Foundations of Education (12th ed.), Cengage, ISBN 978-1-133-58985-3
  • O'Sullivan, Emer (2010), Historical Dictionary of Children's Literature, Scarecrow Press, ISBN 978-0-8108-7496-1
  • Phillips, Richard (1996), Mapping Men & Empire: A Geography of Adventure, Routledge, ISBN 978-0-415-13772-0
  • Potter, Jane (2007), "Children's Books", in Finkelstein, David; McCleery, Alistair (eds.), The Edinburgh History of the Book in Scotland: Professionalism and Diversity 1880–2000, vol. 4, Edinburgh University Press, pp. 352–367, ISBN 978-0-7486-1829-3
  • Reiff, Raychel Haugrud (2010), William Golding: Lord of the Flies, Marshall Cavendish, ISBN 978-0-7614-4700-9
  • Sammons, Jeffrey L. (2004), Friedrich Spielhagen, Verlag Max Niemeyer, ISBN 978-3-484-32117-5
  • Short, John Rennie (2002), Imagined Country: Society, Culture, and Environment, Syracuse University Press, ISBN 978-0-8156-2954-2
  • Townsend, John Rowe (1974), "1840–1915: Nineteenth-Century Adventures", Written for Children: An Outline of English Language Children's Literature, Viking Children's Books, ISBN 978-0-7226-5466-8
  • Tucker, Nicholas (1990), The Child and the Book: A Psychological and Literary Exploration, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-39835-0
  • Ward, Simon (2007), "The Economics of Authorship", in Finkelstein, David; McCleery, Alistair (eds.), The Edinburgh History of the Book in Scotland: Professionalism and Diversity 1880–2000, vol. 4, Edinburgh University Press, pp. 409–430, ISBN 978-0-7486-1829-3

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coral, island, this, article, about, 1857, novel, geographical, feature, coral, island, other, uses, coral, island, disambiguation, tale, pacific, ocean, 1857, novel, written, scottish, author, ballantyne, first, works, juvenile, fiction, feature, exclusively,. This article is about the 1857 novel For the geographical feature see coral island For other uses see Coral Island disambiguation The Coral Island A Tale of the Pacific Ocean 1857 is a novel written by Scottish author R M Ballantyne One of the first works of juvenile fiction to feature exclusively juvenile heroes the story relates the adventures of three boys marooned on a South Pacific island the only survivors of a shipwreck The Coral IslandTitle page illustrated 1893 edition of The Coral IslandAuthorR M BallantyneLanguageEnglishGenreAdventure novelPublisherT Nelson amp SonsPublication date1857Media typePrint Hardback amp paperback TextThe Coral Island at Wikisource A typical Robinsonade a genre of fiction inspired by Daniel Defoe s Robinson Crusoe and one of the most popular of its type the book first went on sale in late 1857 and has never been out of print Among the novel s major themes are the civilising effect of Christianity 19th century imperialism in the South Pacific and the importance of hierarchy and leadership It was the inspiration for William Golding s dystopian novel Lord of the Flies 1954 which inverted the morality of The Coral Island in Ballantyne s story the children encounter evil but in Lord of the Flies evil is within them In the early 20th century the novel was considered a classic for primary school children in the UK and in the United States it was a staple of high school suggested reading lists Modern critics consider the book s worldview to be dated and imperialist but although less popular today The Coral Island was adapted into a four part children s television drama broadcast by ITV in 2000 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Biographical background and publication 1 2 Literary and historical context 2 Plot summary 3 Genre and style 4 Themes 5 Critical reception 6 Influence 7 Television adaptations 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 Citations 8 3 Bibliography 9 External linksBackground editBiographical background and publication edit Born in Edinburgh in 1825 and raised there Ballantyne was the ninth of ten children and the youngest son Tutored by his mother and sisters his only formal education was a brief period at Edinburgh Academy in 1835 37 At the age of 16 he travelled to Canada where he spent five years working for the Hudson s Bay Company trading with the First Nations for furs 1 He returned to Scotland in 1847 and for some years worked for the publisher Messrs Constable 2 first as a clerk 1 and then as a partner in the business 3 During his time in Canada he had helped to pass the time by writing long letters to his mother to which he attributed whatever small amount of facility in composition he may have acquired 4 and began his first book 5 Ballantyne s Canadian experiences formed the basis of his first novel The Young Fur Traders published in 1856 1 the year he decided to become a full time writer and embarked on the adventure stories for the young with which his name is popularly associated 2 Ballantyne never visited the coral islands of the South Pacific relying instead on the accounts of others that were then beginning to emerge in Britain which he exaggerated for theatrical effect by including plenty of gore and violence meant to titillate his juvenile readership 6 His ignorance of the South Pacific caused him to erroneously describe coconuts as being soft and easily opened a stickler for accuracy he resolved that in future whenever possible he would write only about things he had personal experience of 7 Ballantyne wrote The Coral Island while staying in a house on the Burntisland seafront opposite Edinburgh on the Firth of Forth in Fife According to Ballantyne biographer Eric Quayle he borrowed extensively from an 1852 novel by the American author James F Bowman The Island Home 8 He also borrowed from John Williams s Narrative of Missionary Enterprises 1837 to the extent that cultural historian Rod Edmond has suggested that Ballantyne must have written one chapter of The Coral Island with Williams s book open in front of him so similar is the text 9 Edmond describes the novel as a fruit cocktail of other writing about the Pacific 10 adding that by modern standards Ballantyne s plagiarism in The Coral Island is startling 11 Although the first edition is dated 1858 it was on sale in bookshops from early December 1857 dating books forward was a common practice at the time especially during the Christmas period 12 to preserve their newness into the new year 13 The Coral Island is Ballantyne s second novel 14 a and has never been out of print 15 He was an exceedingly prolific author who wrote more than 100 books in his 40 year career 16 According to professor and author John Rennie Short Ballantyne had a deep religious conviction and felt it his duty to educate Victorian middle class boys his target audience in codes of honour decency and religiosity 17 The first edition of The Coral Island was published by T Nelson amp Sons who in common with many other publishers of the time had a policy when accepting a manuscript of buying the copyright from the author rather than paying royalties as a result authors generally did not receive any income from the sale of subsequent editions 18 b Ballantyne received between 50 and 60 20 equivalent to about 6500 as of 2017 update c but when the novel s popularity became evident and the number of editions increased he tried unsuccessfully to buy back the copyright He wrote bitterly to Nelsons in 1893 about the copyrights they held on his books while he had earned nothing for thirty eight years you have reaped the whole profits 22 The Coral Island still considered a classic was republished by Penguin Books in 1995 in their Popular Classics series 8 Literary and historical context edit Published during the first golden age of children s fiction 12 The Coral Island began a trend in boys fiction by using boys as the main characters a device now commonplace in the genre 23 It preserves according to literary critic Minnie Singh the moralizing aspects of didactic texts but does so and in this regard it is a founding text by the congruence of subject and implied reader the story is about boys and written retrospectively as though by a boy for an audience of boys 23 According to literary critic Frank Kermode The Coral Island could be used as a document in the history of ideas 24 A scientific and social background for the novel is found in Darwinism of the natural and the social kind For instance although The Coral Island was published a year before Origin of Species whose ideas were already being circulated and discussed widely Charles Darwin s 1842 The Structure and Distribution of Coral Reefs was one of the best known contemporary accounts of the growth of coral 25 Ballantyne had been reading books by Darwin and by his rival Alfred Russel Wallace 12 in later publications he also acknowledged the naturalist Henry Ogg Forbes 26 The interest in evolutionary theory was reflected in much contemporary popular literature 27 and social Darwinism was an important factor contributing to the world view of the Victorians and their empire building 28 Plot summary editThe story is written as a first person narrative from the perspective of 15 year old Ralph Rover one of three boys shipwrecked on the coral reef of a large but uninhabited Polynesian island Ralph tells the story retrospectively looking back on his boyhood adventure I was a boy when I went through the wonderful adventures herein set down With the memory of my boyish feelings strong upon me I present my book especially to boys in the earnest hope that they may derive valuable information much pleasure great profit and unbounded amusement from its pages 29 nbsp Jack Ralph and Peterkin after reaching the island from an 1884 edition of the novel The account starts briskly only four pages are devoted to Ralph s early life and a further fourteen to his voyage to the Pacific Ocean on board the Arrow He and his two companions 18 year old Jack Martin and 13 year old Peterkin Gay are the sole survivors of the shipwreck The narrative is in two parts The first describes how the boys feed themselves what they drink the clothing and shelter they fashion and how they cope with having to rely on their own resources The second half of the novel is more action packed featuring conflicts with pirates fighting between the native Polynesians and the conversion efforts of Christian missionaries Fruit fish and wild pigs provide plentiful food and at first the boys life on the island is idyllic They build a shelter and construct a small boat using their only possessions a broken telescope an iron bound oar and a small axe Their first contact with other humans comes after several months when they observe two large outrigger canoes in the distance one pursued by the other The two groups of Polynesians disembark on the beach and engage in battle the victors take fifteen prisoners and kill and eat one immediately But when they threaten to kill one of the three women captured along with two children the boys intervene to defeat the pursuers earning them the gratitude of the chief Tararo The next morning they prevent another act of cannibalism The natives leave and the boys are alone once more More unwelcome visitors then arrive in the shape of British pirates who make a living by trading or stealing sandalwood The three boys hide in a cave but Ralph is captured when he ventures out to see if the intruders have left and is taken on board the pirate schooner He strikes up a friendship with one of the crew Bloody Bill and when the ship calls at the island of Emo to trade for more wood Ralph experiences many facets of the island s culture the popular sport of surfing the sacrificing of babies to eel gods rape and cannibalism nbsp Ralph and Bloody Bill making their escape on board the pirate schooner from an 1884 edition of the novel Rising tensions result in the inhabitants attacking the pirates leaving only Ralph and Bloody Bill alive The pair succeed in making their escape in the schooner but Bill is mortally wounded He makes a death bed repentance for his evil life leaving Ralph to sail back to the Coral Island alone where he is reunited with his friends The three boys sail to the island of Mango where a missionary has converted some of the population to Christianity There they once again meet Tararo whose daughter Avatea wishes to become a Christian against her father s wishes The boys attempt to take Avatea in a small boat to a nearby island the chief of which has been converted but en route they are overtaken by one of Tararo s war canoes and taken prisoner They are released a month later after the arrival of another missionary and Tararo s conversion to Christianity The false gods 30 of Mango are consigned to the flames and the boys set sail for home older and wiser They return as adults for another adventure in Ballantyne s 1861 novel The Gorilla Hunters a sequel to The Coral Island 31 32 Genre and style editAll Ballantyne s novels are in his own words adventure stories for young folks and The Coral Island is no exception 17 It is a Robinsonade a genre of fiction inspired by Daniel Defoe s Robinson Crusoe 1719 33 one of the most popular of its type 6 and one of the first works of juvenile fiction to feature exclusively juvenile heroes 23 34 Susan Maher professor of English notes that in comparison to Robinson Crusoe such books generally replaced some of the original s romance with a pedestrian realism exemplified by works such as The Coral Island and Frederick Marryat s 1841 novel Masterman Ready or the Wreck of the Pacific 35 Romance with its attention to character development was only restored to the genre of boys fiction with Robert Louis Stevenson s Treasure Island argues literary critic Lisa Honaker The Coral Island for all its adventure is greatly occupied with the realism of domestic fiction the domain of the realist novel Ballantyne devotes about a third of the book to descriptions of the boys living arrangements 31 The book exhibits a light hearted confidence in its description of an adventure that was above all fun 36 As Ralph says in his preface If there is any boy or man who loves to be melancholy and morose and who cannot enter with kindly sympathy into the regions of fun let me seriously advise him to shut my book and put it away It is not meant for him 29 Professor of English M Daphne Kutzer has observed that the swift movement of the story from coastal England to exotic Pacific island is similar to the swift movement from the real world to the fantastic in children s fantasy 37 To a modern reader Ballantyne s books can seem overly concerned with accounts of flora and fauna 38 an ethnographic gloss intended to suggest that their settings are real places offering adventures to those who can reach them 37 They can also seem obtrusively pious 38 but according to John Rennie Short the moral tone of Ballantyne s writing is compensated for by his ability to tell a cracking good yarn in an accessible and well fashioned prose style 17 Themes editThe major themes of the novel revolve around the influence of Christianity the importance of social hierarchies and the inherent superiority of civilised Europeans over the South Sea islanders Martine Dutheil professor of English considers the novel a key text mapping out colonial relations in the Victorian period 8 The basic subject of the novel is popular and widespread castaway children assuming adult responsibilities without adult supervision and The Coral Island is considered the classic example of such a book 39 I saw that these inhuman monsters were actually launching their canoe over the living bodies of their victims But there was no pity in the breasts of these men Forward they went in ruthless indifference shouting as they went while high above their voices rang the dying shrieks of those wretched creatures as one after another the ponderous canoe passed over them burst the eyeballs from their sockets and sent the life blood gushing from their mouths Oh reader this is no fiction I would not for the sake of thrilling you with horror invent so terrible a scene It was witnessed It is true true as that accursed sin which has rendered the human heart capable of such diabolical enormities 40 The supposed civilising influence of missionaries in spreading Christianity among the natives of the South Seas is an important theme of the second half of the story 16 as Jack remarks to Peterkin all the natives of the South Sea Islands are fierce cannibals and they have little respect for strangers 41 Modern critics view this aspect of the novel less benevolently Jerry Phillips in a 1995 article sees in The Coral Island the perfect realiz ation of the official discourse of 19th century Pacific imperialism which he argues was obsessed with the purity of God Trade and the Nation 42 The importance of hierarchy and leadership is also a significant element The overarching hierarchy of race is informed by Victorian concepts influenced by the new theories of evolution proposed by Darwin and others In morals and culture the natives are placed lower on the evolutionary ladder than are Europeans as is evidenced in the battle over the native woman Avatea which pits the forces of civilization versus the forces of cannibalism 43 Another hierarchy is seen in the organisation of the boys Although Jack Ralph and Peterkin each have a say in how they should organise themselves ultimately the younger boys defer to Jack 44 a natural leader 39 particularly in a crisis forming a natural hierarchy The pirates also have a hierarchy but one without democracy and as a consequence are wiped out The hierarchy of the natives is imposed by savagery Ballantyne s message is that leaders should be respected by those they lead and govern with their consent 44 This educational message is especially appropriate considering Ballantyne s adolescent audience the future rulers of the world 35 Modern critics find darker undertones in the novel In an essay published in College English in 2001 Martine Dutheil states that The Coral Island can be thought of as epitomising a move away from the confidence and optimism of the early Victorian proponents of British imperialism toward self consciousness and anxiety about colonial domination She locates this anxiety in what she calls the rhetoric of excess that features in the descriptions of cannibalism and especially in the accounts of Fijian savagery provided by Bloody Bill most notably that of the sacrifice of children to the eel gods and the missionary a representative of the London Missionary Society an emblematic figure of colonial fiction 8 Others have also linked popular boys fiction of the period with imperialism Joseph Bristow s Empire Boys 1991 claimed to see an imperialist manhood which shaped British attitudes towards empire and masculinity 45 The novel s portrayal of Pacific culture and the effects of colonisation are analyzed in studies such as Brian Street s The Savage in Literature Representations of primitive society in English Fiction 1975 46 and Rod Edmond s Representing the South Pacific Colonial Discourse from Cook to Gauguin 1998 47 48 The domination imposed by geographical mapping of a territory and policing of its native inhabitants is an important theme in the novel both specifically and in general in the topography of the island as mapped by the boys and the South Pacific s eventual subjugation and conversion to Christianity a topic continued in Stevenson s Treasure Island 49 The exploration of the relationship between nature and evangelical Christianity is another typically Victorian theme Coral connects the two ideas Literary critic Katharine Anderson explains that coral jewellery popular in the period had a pious significance d The enchanted garden of coral the boys discover at the bottom of their island s lagoon is suggestive of missionary encounters with the societies of the Pacific Island 25 In Victorian society coral had been given an evangelical framing and the little coral insect responsible for building coral reefs e mirrored the child reader s productive capacity as a fundraiser for the missionary cause literary critic Michelle Elleray discusses numerous children s books from the early to mid 19th century including The Coral Island in which coral plays such an educational role 54 The novel s setting provides the backdrop for a meditation in the style of Jean Jacques Rousseau who promoted an educational setting in which lessons are provided by direct interactions with the natural world rather than by books and coercive teachers 55 Singh points out that Rousseau in Emile or On Education promotes the reading and even imitation of Robinson Crusoe 23 literary critic Fiona McCulloch argues that the unmediated knowledge the boys gain on their coral island resembles the direct language for children Rousseau advocates in Emile 12 Critical reception editThe Coral Island was an almost instant success and was translated into almost every European language within fifty years of its publication 56 It was widely admired by its contemporary readers although modern critics view the text as featuring dated colonialist themes and arguably racist undertones 6 Ballantyne s blend of blood thirsty adventure and pious imperialism appealed not just to his target juvenile audience but also to their parents and teachers 57 He is today mainly remembered for The Coral Island to the exclusion of much of his other work 58 The novel was still considered a classic for English primary school children in the early 20th century 59 In the United States it was long a staple of suggested reading lists for high school students such a list discussed in a 1915 article in The English Journal recommends the novel in the category Stories for Boys in Easy Style 60 A simplified adaptation of the book was recommended in the 1950s for American 12 14 year olds 61 62 Although mostly neglected by modern scholars 26 and generally considered to be dated in many aspects in 2006 it was voted one of the top twenty Scottish novels at the 15th International World Wide Web Conference 63 Influence editRobert Louis Stevenson s 1882 novel Treasure Island was in part inspired by The Coral Island 64 which he admired for its better qualities 6 as was J M Barrie s character Peter Pan both Stevenson and Barrie had been fervent boy readers of the novel 65 Novelist G A Henty was also influenced by Ballantyne s audience friendly method of didactism 23 William Golding s 1954 novel Lord of the Flies was written as a counterpoint to or even a parody of 66 The Coral Island 67 and Golding makes explicit references to it At the end of the novel for instance one of the naval officers who rescues the children mentions the book commenting on the hunt for one of their number Ralph as a jolly good show Like the Coral Island 68 Jack also makes an appearance in Lord of the Flies as Jack Merridew representing the irrational nature of the boys Indeed Golding s three central characters Ralph Piggy and Jack are caricatures of Ballantyne s heroes 23 Despite having enjoyed The Coral Island many times as a child Golding strongly disagreed with the views that it espoused and in contrast Lord of the Flies depicts the English boys as savages themselves 67 who forget more than they learn unlike Ballantyne s boys 16 Golding described the relationship between the two books by saying that The Coral Island rotted to compost in his mind and in the compost a new myth put down roots 67 Neither is the idyllic nature of Ballantyne s coral island to be found on Stevenson s treasure island which is unsuitable for settlement but exists merely as a site from which to excavate treasure a view consistent with the late Victorian imperial mission according to Honaker 31 Television adaptations editThe Coral Island was adapted into a children s television series in a joint venture between Thames Television and the Australian Broadcasting Corporation in 1980 first shown on Australian and British television in 1983 69 It was also adapted into a four part children s television drama by Zenith Productions broadcast by ITV in 2000 70 References editNotes edit The Coral Island is Ballantyne s third book but his first Hudson s Bay or Every day Life in the Wilds of North America 1848 is a work of non fiction 14 It was not until the 1880s that the modern system of paying authors an agreed percentage of the retail price of every book sold became commonplace in Britain 19 Calculated using the Bank of England s UK price index 21 The Victorian love of coral jewellery was at its height from the 1840s to the 1850s perhaps prompted by the coral ornaments presented by her husband to his royal bride the Duchess d Aumale at their wedding in Naples 50 51 in 1844 52 Coral insect was a term commonly used in Ballantyne s time to describe the coral polyps the remains of which form the coral they were not considered to be literally insects 53 Citations edit a b c Rennie Neil 2004 Ballantyne Robert Michael 1825 1894 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 1232 retrieved 17 December 2013 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b Obituary The Times no 34184 p 5 10 February 1894 retrieved 17 December 2013 Ballantyne 2004 p 6 Ballantyne 2004 p 4 Ballantyne 2004 p 5 a b c d The Coral Island Children s Literature Review January 2009 archived from the original on 10 June 2014 retrieved 4 May 2012 Tucker 1990 pp 167 168 a b c d Dutheil Martine Hennard 2001 The Representation of the Cannibal in Ballantyne s The Coral Island Colonial Anxieties in Victorian Popular Fiction College Literature 28 1 105 122 JSTOR 25112562 Edmond 1997 p 147 Edmond 1997 p 146 Edmond 1997 p 148 a b c d McCulloch Fiona 2000 The Broken Telescope Misrepresentation in The Coral Island Children s Literature Association Quarterly 25 3 137 145 doi 10 1353 chq 0 1401 S2CID 143981168 Sammons 2004 p xviii a b Cox Michael Riches Christopher 2012 Ballantyne R M Robert Michael Ballantyne 1825 1894 Scottish novelist A Dictionary of Writers and their Works online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780199585052 001 0001 ISBN 9780199585052 Jolly Roslyn 2006 Ebb Tide and The Coral Island Scottish Studies Review 7 79 91 dead link a b c Townsend 1974 pp 61 62 a b c Short 2002 p 163 Finkelstein amp McCleery 2012 p 76 Finkelstein amp McCleery 2012 p 80 Potter 2007 p 359 Inflation Calculator Bank of England archived from the original on 22 November 2016 retrieved 29 September 2018 Ward 2007 p 410 a b c d e f Singh Minnie 1997 The Government of Boys Golding s Lord of the Flies and Ballantyne s Coral Island Children s Literature 25 205 213 doi 10 1353 chl 0 0478 S2CID 144319352 Kermode 1962 p 203 a b Anderson Katharine 2008 Coral Jewellery Victorian Review 34 1 47 52 doi 10 1353 vcr 2008 0008 JSTOR 41220397 S2CID 201782824 a b Miller John 2008 Adventures in the Volcano s Throat Tropical Landscape and Bodily Horror in R M Ballantyne s Blown to Bits Victorian Review 34 1 115 130 doi 10 1353 vcr 2008 0021 JSTOR 41220406 S2CID 162508944 Hannabuss Stuart 1995 Moral Islands A Study of Robert Michael Ballantyne Writer for Children Scottish Literary Journal 22 2 29 40 Brantlinger Patrick 1985 Victorians and Africans The Genealogy of the Myth of the Dark Continent Critical Inquiry 12 1 166 203 doi 10 1086 448326 JSTOR 1343467 S2CID 161311164 a b Ballantyne 1911 Preface Ballantyne 1911 p 332 a b c Honaker Lisa 2004 One Man to Rely On Long John Silver and the Shifting Character of Victorian Boys Fiction Journal of Narrative Theory 34 1 27 53 doi 10 1353 jnt 2004 0003 JSTOR 30225794 S2CID 162220139 MacKenzie 1989 p 158 Mathison 2008 p 173 Phillips 1996 p 36 a b Maher Susan Naramore 1988 Recasting Crusoe Frederick Marryat R M Ballantyne and the Nineteenth Century Robinsonade Children s Literature Association Quarterly 13 4 169 175 doi 10 1353 chq 0 0620 S2CID 144122068 Phillips 1996 p 38 a b Kutzer 2000 p 2 a b Lessing amp Ousby 1993 p 54 a b Niemeyer Carl 1961 The Coral Island Revisited College English 22 44 241 245 doi 10 2307 373028 JSTOR 373028 Ballantyne 1911 p 245 Ballantyne 1911 p 172 Phillips Jerry 1995 Narrative Adventure and Schizophrenia From Smollett s Roderick Random to Melville s Omoo Journal of Narrative Technique 25 2 177 201 JSTOR 30225966 Kutzer 2000 p 6 a b Kutzer 2000 pp 2 3 August E R Brake Laurel 1993 Rev of Joseph Bristow Empire Boys Adventures in a Man s World Victorian Periodicals Review 26 4 235 JSTOR 20082717 Korg Jacob 1976 Rev of Brian Street The Savage in Literature Representations of Primitive Society in English Fiction 1858 1920 Nineteenth Century Fiction 31 1 118 119 doi 10 2307 2933323 JSTOR 2933323 Hanlon David Edmond Rod 1999 Rev of Rod Edmond Representing the South Pacific Colonial Discourse from Cook to Gauguin American Historical Review 104 4 1261 1262 doi 10 2307 2649581 JSTOR 2649581 S2CID 162306632 archived from the original on 20 July 2021 retrieved 14 January 2020 Kitalong Karla Saari Emond Rod 1999 2000 Rev of Rod Emond Representing the South Pacific Colonial Discourse from Cook to Gauguin Pacific Affairs 72 4 623 625 doi 10 2307 2672435 JSTOR 2672435 Mathison 2008 p 178 Flower amp Langley Levy Moore 2002 p 18 Anderson Katharine Spring 2008 Coral Jewellery Victorian Review 34 1 47 52 doi 10 1353 vcr 2008 0008 JSTOR 41220397 S2CID 201782824 Marriage of the Duke D Aumale The Times no 18787 p 5 6 December 1844 retrieved 17 January 2014 Darwin 2009 p 4 Elleray M 2010 Little Builders Coral Insects Missionary Culture and the Victorian Child Victorian Literature and Culture 39 223 doi 10 1017 S1060150310000367 S2CID 162940808 Ornstein 2012 pp 103 105 Carpenter amp Prichard 1984 p 131 Miller John William 25 February 2008 The Coral Island The Literary Encyclopedia archived from the original on 20 July 2021 retrieved 27 June 2013 Forman Ross G 1999 When Britons Brave Brazil British Imperialism and the Adventure Tale in Latin America 1850 1918 Victorian Studies 42 3 454 487 doi 10 2979 VIC 1999 42 3 455 JSTOR 3828976 S2CID 144905933 Marsh Jackie 2004 The Primary Canon A Critical Review British Journal of Educational Studies 52 3 246 262 doi 10 1111 j 1467 8527 2004 00266 x JSTOR 1556055 S2CID 144035337 Herzberg Max J 1915 Supplementary Reading for High School Pupils English Journal 4 6 373 382 doi 10 2307 801636 JSTOR 801636 Assuma Daniel J 1953 A List of Simplified Classics College English 42 2 94 96 doi 10 2307 808695 JSTOR 808695 Blair Glenn M 1955 Reading Materials for Pupils with Reading Disabilities The High School Journal 39 1 14 21 JSTOR 40363447 Top twenty Scottish novels WWW2006 archived from the original on 14 March 2012 retrieved 4 May 2012 Brantlinger 2009 p 33 O Sullivan 2010 p 37 McNamara Eugene 1965 Holden as Novelist English Journal 54 3 166 170 doi 10 2307 811334 JSTOR 811334 a b c Kundu 2006 p 219 Reiff 2010 p 93 Coral Island British Film Institute archived from the original on 7 February 2009 retrieved 10 September 2012 The Coral Island British Film Institute archived from the original on 21 January 2009 retrieved 10 September 2012 Bibliography edit Ballantyne R M 1911 1858 The Coral Island A Tale of the Pacific Ocean Thomas Nelson and Sons OCLC 540728645 Ballantyne R M 2004 1893 Personal Reminiscences in Book Making Kessinger Publishing ISBN 978 1 4191 4102 7 Brantlinger Patrick 2009 Victorian Literature and Postcolonial Studies Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 3304 3 Carpenter Humphrey Prichard Mari 1984 The Oxford Companion to Children s Literature Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 211582 9 Darwin Charles 2009 1842 The Structure and Formation of Coral Reefs MobileReference ISBN 978 1 60501 648 1 Edmond Rod 1997 Representing the South Pacific Colonial Discourse from Cook to Gauguin Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 55054 3 Finkelstein David McCleery Alistair 2012 An Introduction to Book History Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 51591 0 Flower Margaret Langley Levy Moore Doris 2002 Victorian Jewellery Courier Dove ISBN 978 0 486 42230 5 Kermode Frank 1962 William Golding Puzzles and Epiphanies Essays and Reviews 1958 1961 Routledge and Kegan Paul pp 198 213 Kundu Rama 2006 New Perspectives on British Authors From William Shakespeare to Graham Greene Sarup amp Sons ISBN 978 81 7625 690 2 Kutzer M Daphne 2000 Empire s Children Empire and Imperialism in Classic British Children s Books Routledge ISBN 978 0 8153 3491 0 Lessing Doris Ousby Ian 1993 The Cambridge Guide to Literature in English 2nd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 44086 8 MacKenzie John M 1989 Hunting and the Natural World in Juvenile Literature in Richards Jeffrey ed Imperialism and Juvenile Literature Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 7190 2420 7 Mathison Ymitr 2008 Maps Pirates and Treasure The Commodification of Imperialism in Nineteenth Century Boys Adventure Fiction in Denisoff Dennis ed The Nineteenth Century Child and the Rise of Consumer Culture Ashgate pp 173 188 ISBN 978 0 7546 6156 6 Ornstein Allan C 2012 Foundations of Education 12th ed Cengage ISBN 978 1 133 58985 3 O Sullivan Emer 2010 Historical Dictionary of Children s Literature Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 7496 1 Phillips Richard 1996 Mapping Men amp Empire A Geography of Adventure Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 13772 0 Potter Jane 2007 Children s Books in Finkelstein David McCleery Alistair eds The Edinburgh History of the Book in Scotland Professionalism and Diversity 1880 2000 vol 4 Edinburgh University Press pp 352 367 ISBN 978 0 7486 1829 3 Reiff Raychel Haugrud 2010 William Golding Lord of the Flies Marshall Cavendish ISBN 978 0 7614 4700 9 Sammons Jeffrey L 2004 Friedrich Spielhagen Verlag Max Niemeyer ISBN 978 3 484 32117 5 Short John Rennie 2002 Imagined Country Society Culture and Environment Syracuse University Press ISBN 978 0 8156 2954 2 Townsend John Rowe 1974 1840 1915 Nineteenth Century Adventures Written for Children An Outline of English Language Children s Literature Viking Children s Books ISBN 978 0 7226 5466 8 Tucker Nicholas 1990 The Child and the Book A Psychological and Literary Exploration Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 39835 0 Ward Simon 2007 The Economics of Authorship in Finkelstein David McCleery Alistair eds The Edinburgh History of the Book in Scotland Professionalism and Diversity 1880 2000 vol 4 Edinburgh University Press pp 409 430 ISBN 978 0 7486 1829 3External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article The Coral Island Listen to this article 24 minutes source source nbsp This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 13 July 2015 2015 07 13 and does not reflect subsequent edits Audio help More spoken articles The Coral Island at Standard Ebooks The Coral Island at Project Gutenberg The Coral Island at Internet Archive and Google Books scanned books original editions illustrated nbsp The Coral Island public domain audiobook at LibriVox Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Coral Island amp oldid 1210858430, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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