From Braemar to Hollywood: The American Appropriation of Robert Louis Stevenson’s Pirates

The pirate tropes that pervade popular culture today can be traced in large part to Robert Louis Stevenson&#8217;s 1883 novel, <i>Treasure Island</i>. However, it is the novel&#8217;s afterlife on film that has generated fictional pirates as we now understand them. By tracing the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Richard J. Hill, Laura Eidam
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-01-01
Series:Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/9/1/10
Description
Summary:The pirate tropes that pervade popular culture today can be traced in large part to Robert Louis Stevenson&#8217;s 1883 novel, <i>Treasure Island</i>. However, it is the novel&#8217;s afterlife on film that has generated fictional pirates as we now understand them. By tracing the transformation of the author&#8217;s pirate captain, Long John Silver, from N. C. Wyeth&#8217;s illustrations (1911) through the cinematic performances of Wallace Beery (1934) and Robert Newton (1950), this paper demonstrates that the films have created a quintessentially &#8220;American pirate&#8221;&#8212;a figure that has necessarily evolved in response to differences in medium, the performances of the leading actors, and filmgoers&#8217; expectations. Comparing depictions of Silver&#8217;s dress, physique, and speech patterns, his role vis-&#224;-vis Jim Hawkins, each adaptation&#8217;s narrative point of view, and Silver&#8217;s departure at the end of the films reveals that while the Silver of the silver screen may appear to represent a significant departure from the text, he embodies a nuanced reworking of and testament to the author&#8217;s original.
ISSN:2076-0787