The only real politics that the book deals with is the one promoted by Defoe, as he is obviously focused on supporting the image of England as one of the most important colonial forces.

Works cited:

Clowes, Edith W. "The Robinson Myth Reread in Postcolonial and Postcommunist Modes," Critique36.2 (1995): 145

Crosby, Ray, "Robinson Crusoe's Anti-Pilgrimage," Retrieved June 29, 2011, from the University of California Website: http://ucriverside.academia.edu/RayCrosby/Talks/37311/Robinson_Crusoes_Anti-Pilgrimage

Defoe, Daniel, "Robinson Crusoe," Arc Manor LLC, 2008.

Donoghue, Frank, "Inevitable Politics: Rulership and Identity in Robinson Crusoe," Studies in the Novel27.1 (1995)

Mcinelly, Brett C. "Expanding Empires, Expanding Selves: Colonialism, the Novel, and Robinson Crusoe," Studies in the Novel 35.1 (2003)

Severin, Tim In Search of Robinson Crusoe (New York: Basic Books, 2002)

Werner, Louis "En Route to the Real Robinson Crusoe: A Simple Story That Started on Chile's Juan Fernandez Archipelago Spawned a Legend That Has Inspired Numerous Books and Films...
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