The Loss of El Dorado

The Loss of El Dorado, by the Nobel Prize winner V. S. Naipaul, is a history book about Venezuela and Trinidad. It was published in 1969. The title refers to the El Dorado legend.

The Loss of El Dorado

First edition
Author V. S. Naipaul
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Genre History
Publisher André Deutsch
Publication date
1969
Media type Print

Back in London in October 1966, Naipaul received an invitation from the American publisher Little, Brown and Company to write a book on Port-of-Spain.[1] The book took two years to write, its scope widening with time. The Loss of El Dorado eventually became a narrative history of Trinidad based on primary sources. Pat spent many months in the archives of the British Library reading those sources.[1] In the end, the finished product was not to the liking of Little, Brown, who were expecting a guidebook.[1] Alfred A. Knopf agreed to publish it instead in the United States, as did André Deutsch later in Britain.[1]

The Loss of El Dorado is an attempt to ferret out an older, deeper history of Trinidad, one preceding its commonly taught history as a British-run plantation economy of slaves and indentured workers.[2] Naipaul looks at the Spanish/British colonial rivalry in the Orinoco basin, drawing on contemporary sources written in Spanish and English.[3] The book examines the obsessive search for El Dorado, a Spanish obsession, in turn pursued by the British, to explore the region. In particular, Sir Walter Raleigh's voyages are examined with a psychological depth more typical of novels than historical works.

In the second half of the book, the focus shifts to Trinidad around the beginning of the nineteenth century under British colonial rule becoming mired in slavery, a revolution of lofty ideals in South America. Naipaul gives a lot of attention to the circumstances surrounding the trial of Sir Thomas Picton for torture, but he also looks at general Francisco Miranda as human face of these stories[2] and Venezuela's struggle for independence from Spain.

Like most of Naipaul's work, "The Loss of El Dorado" has received considerable critical recognition. On publication its admirers included the Cambridge historian John H. Plumb. However, the author has confessed to not being completely happy with his book. He reworked some of its material in a later book, A Way in the World, where historical narrative is treated in a different way, and is in part rendered as fiction.[4]

Translation

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 French 2008, p. 258.
  2. 1 2 King 2003, pp. 83–84.
  3. According to Paul Theroux´s book "Sir Vidia's Shadow", Naipaul was assisted in his research by his first wife, Patricia Hale
  4. Gussow, Mel (April 24, 1994) V. S. Naipaul in Search of Himself: A Conversation, New York Times
  5. José María Lassalle Ruiz (12 May 2001), La Trinidad caribeña de V. S. Naipaul, ojosdepapel.com (review of Spanish translation)


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