Criticism > Nineteenth-Century Literary Criticism > Treasure Island, Robert Louis Stevenson - Sister Mary Louise McKenzie (essay date 1982)


Treasure Island, Robert Louis Stevenson - Sister Mary Louise McKenzie (essay date 1982)

Sister Mary Louise McKenzie (essay date 1982)

SOURCE: "The Toy Theatre, Romance, and Treasure Island: The Artistry of R. L. S.," in English Studies in Canada, Vol. VIII, No. 4, December, 1982, pp. 409-21.

[In the following essay, McKenzie examines the influence of the nineteenth-century toy theatre upon Stevenson's aesthetic sensibility. She focuses on elements of excitement, imagination, chance, and playfulness in both the toy theatre and Stevenson's fiction.']

Treasure Island, a six-part romance first published in a boys' paper, has been charming readers as a kind of archetypal adventure tale for a century. Its rapid but1 predictable incidents, swashbuckling characters, and exotic settings combine with the enthusiasm of the young narrator to create the impression of a youthful day-dream rather than a serious quest. The story's2 apparent naivete, however, conceals interesting elements of the...

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