• Robinsonian

    Origin

    From en + -Robinson + ian.

    Full definition of Robinsonian

    Adjective

    Robinsonian

    1. Suggestive of the fictional Robinson Crusoe, a resourceful castaway on a desert island.
      • 1947, w, Listen, Gentile! The Story of a Life Chapter Hagshamah, Before the assembly had recovered from the stir caused by Chick’s farewell, a new wave of surprise swept the crowd: for Levy had given the word to Eleazar, popularly known as Crusoe on account of his Robinsonian escapades and physique.
      • 1959, w:Félix Martí Ibáñez, Friends for the Road, In this sensitive book we can live step by step the author’s voluntary exile at Walden Pond, witness and feel the change of seasons in his Robinsonian isolation: the silver petals of the snow silently drifting to the ground, ...
      • 1982, w, w:The Ethics of Liberty Chapter A Crusoe Social Philosophy, The bringing in of “Friday,” or of one or more other persons, after analysis of strictly Robinsonian isolation, then serves to show how the addition of other persons affects the discussion.
      • 2005, w:Rodrigo Fresán, Kensington Gardens Chapter The Invader, ... Magic Alex (born Yannis Alexis Mardas, television repairman and genius in residence at Apple Electronics at the expense of the increasingly chaotic finances of his four bosses; a feverish swindler working on the creation of stereo surround-sound wallpaper and the construction of a floating communal house on the Greek island of Leslo so the Beatles could live there with their families; and who knows, maybe that Robinsonian project was abandoned after what happened to my parents at sea); ...
      • 2015, w:Andrea Wulf, w Chapter Art, Ecology and Nature: Ernst Haeckel and Humboldt, Once he had reached the tropics, he would leave the ship and begin his ‘Robinsonian project’.
      • 2016, w:Andrew Lambert, Crusoe’s Island: A Rich and Curious History of Pirates, Castaways and Madness Chapter The Magical Island of Daniel Defoe, There is no cave in any Selkirk narrative; he lived in a hut made of sticks and grass. Crusoe lived in a fortified cave, a residence suitable for a colonial overlord in savage lands, not an unarmed maroon expecting to be rescued by English sailors. Indeed the whole island has been reimagined by later visitors to satisfy Robinsonian dreams, without taking the trouble to separate fact and fiction.
      • 2018, Christopher Peterson, Monkey Trouble: The Scandal of Posthumanism Chapter Listing Toward Cosmocracy: The Limits of Hospitality, If democracy is sustained by an irremediable autoimmunitary conflict between freedom and equality, then the “perfect” democracy would require the complete erasure of alterity: a Robinsonian isolation whereby “equality” would be fully reconciled with an unconditional, sovereign freedom.

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