1. BAHA ALDEEN RAED SULIMAN ALMOMANI - Faculty of Language and Communication, Universiti Sultan Zainal Abidin – UniSZA.
2. MOHD NAZRI BIN LATIFF AZMI - Faculty of Language and Communication, Universiti Sultan Zainal Abidin – UniSZA.
This study examines how espionage is portrayed in The Riddle of the Sands by Erskine Childers and Kim by Rudyard Kipling, highlighting how important it is for illuminating and evaluating imperial ideologies. Through comparative and deep analysis, the study reveals how espionage functions as a literary tool for guiding cross-cultural encounters and an instrument for announcing imperial power. In Kim, espionage is seen as a tool of British imperial hegemony, made possible by conciliation and cultural diversity. On the other hand, espionage is portrayed in The Riddle of the Sands as a means of traversing complex cultural contexts while disclosing and upsetting purported threats. By examining these representations, the study reveals and explains how espionage novels critique and uphold colonial power dynamics in this literature. The results contribute to understanding espionage as a significant element in reflecting and coming across imperial philosophies by offering insights into the larger issues of dominance, identity, and cultural exchanges in colonial British literature.
Espionage, Colonialism, Imperialism, Culturalism, Literature.