In Sudan
A Victorian Nile Expedition Through the Sudan Desert, Captivity, and the Mahdist Revolt
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Beschreibung des Verlags
Karl May’s In the Land of the Mahdi: In Sudan is a vivid adventure novel set against the upheavals of the Mahdist Sudan, where desert travel, captivity, intrigue, and imperial conflict converge. Blending ethnographic detail—sometimes filtered through the imaginative conventions of nineteenth-century European fiction—with brisk plotting and moral confrontation, May crafts a narrative of danger and endurance in an exoticized North-East African landscape. The book belongs to the tradition of late nineteenth-century German travel-adventure literature, in which suspense, geographic spectacle, and reflections on cultural difference are tightly interwoven. Karl May (1842–1912), one of the most widely read German popular authors of his era, was famed for writing expansive tales of distant lands he often knew first through study rather than direct experience. His fascination with non-European settings, combined with his gift for serial storytelling and idealized heroism, shaped this Sudan cycle. May’s work frequently reveals both the fantasies and anxieties of his age: colonial expansion, religious conflict, and the longing for ethical order amid violence. This volume is especially recommended to readers interested in German adventure fiction, imperial-era imaginings of Africa, and the cultural history of popular literature. Read critically, it offers both a compelling narrative and a revealing window into Europe’s literary construction of the Sudan.