Title: Heart of Darkness
1Heart of Darkness
- An Brief Look at Conrads Life and Works, Themes
and Motifs in Heart of Darkness, and Apocalypse
Now
2Joseph Conrad
Born 1857 in Russian-occupied Poland Patriot
father family exiled in Russia 1862 Both
parents dead of illness by 1869 Conservative
uncle took him in
3- Joined French Merchant Marine at the age of 16
- Kicked out due to his nationality a suicide
attempt - Joined British Merchant Marine 1878
- Left the sea began writing 1894
- Died 1924 buried in Canterbury
4Joseph Conrads Other Works
- Amayers Folly (1895)
- Lord Jim (1900)
- Heart of Darkness (1902)
- Nostromo (1904)
- Under Western Eyes (1910)
- Chance (1914)
5Heart of Darkness Background
- After a long stint in the east had come to an
end, he was having trouble finding a new
position. - With the help of a relative in Brussels he got
the position as captain of a steamer for a
Belgian trading company. - Conrad had always dreamed of sailing the Congo
- Had to leave early for the job because the
previous captain was killed in a trivial quarrel
6One interpretation of the title A literal
journey into the Dark Continent, (the Heart of
Darkness) as Africa was viewed by Conrads
contemporaries
7Africa and Imperialism
8Congo in the 1890s
Inner Station
9Heart of Darkness Background
- While traveling from Boma (at the mouth) to the
company station at Matadi he met Roger Casement
who told Conrad stories of the harsh treatment of
Africans - Conrad saw some of the most shocking and depraved
examples of human corruption hed ever witnessed.
He was disgusted by the ill treatment of the
natives, the scrabble for loot, the terrible heat
and the lack of water. - He saw human skeletons of bodies left to
rot--many were bodies of men from the chain gangs
building the railroads. - He found his ship was damaged.
- Dysentery was rampant as was malaria Conrad had
to terminate his contract due to illness and
never fully recovered
10Heart of Darkness Conrads most widely read
novel It can be read. . .
- As Autobiography The account of a journey up the
Congo river that Conrad undertook in the early
1890s. - As Anti-colonialist/imperialist An exposition of
the brutality of Belgian colonial rule. (See King
Leopolds Ghost) - As an Arthurian Quest.
- As Classical or Norse Mythology.
- As Christian Mythology (Dante)
- As Psychoanalysis A Journey into the Self
11Autobiography
- Conrad did, in fact, go up the Congo River in
1890 - Like Marlow in the novel, he got the job to go
to the Congo through his aunt. - Like Marlow, he did not get along with the
manager - Like Marlow, he was sent to pick up an agent
(named Klein) - Like Marlow, he fell ill and nearly died
12Anti-colonialist/Imperialist
Conrads own words about colonialism
- The conquest of the earth, which mostly means
the taking it away from those who have a
different complexion or slightly flatter noses
than ourselves, is not a pretty thing when you
look into it too much. - A taint of imbecile rapacity blew through it all
like the whiff from some corpse. - In an essay Conrad calls the colonial
exploitation of the Congo the vilest scramble
for loot that ever disfigured the history of
human conscience
13- In the King Arthur myths a knight in shining
amour goeson a quest, typically a quest for the
holy grail. - The quest usually involves a number of trials.
Some of those are physical, but the toughest
tests are usually spiritual, a test of moral
fibre or personal integrity. - The trials do not necessarily lead to wealth and
fame, but equally often to insight and humility.
Arthurian Quest
14Classical and Norse Mythology
15References to Greek and Norse Mythologyand to
the Iliad, the Odyssey and the Aeneid The women
in the Brussels office the three Fates The
Sepulchral City Descent into the underworld of
Odysseus and Aeneas The river Styx and Lethe
(Rivers in the underworld) The dying negroes The
lifeless shadows in the underworld The journey
itself the journeys of Odysseus and Aeneas
16Christian Mythology
The novel has repeatedly been compared to
DantesDivine Comedy. Dante also undertakes a
journey to the underworld, to the Christian
Hell. Other parallels The river snake
temptation The dying negroes souls in limbo The
Inner Station the inner sanctum of Hell and
Inferno
Dante (1265-1321) with his Divinia Commedia
17Psychoanalytical
More than 20 years before Freud published his
tripartite division of the mind into Superego,
Ego and Id, Conrad seems to use similar ideas.
superego
The part of the mind that represses and controls
impulses (Governance/Policing A civilizing
effect) The part of the mind that controls but
focuses impulses (Self-Expression/ Striving A
pioneering spirit) The instinctual,
pleasure-seeking part of the mind (Can be
degenerate, amoral, disturbing) But the
wilderness had found him out early and the
whisper had proved irresistibly fascinating
ego
id
18Narrative Structure
- Framed Narrative
- Narrator begins, Marlow takes over, Narrator
breaks in occasionally - Marlow is Conrads alter-ego, he shows up in some
of Conrads other works including Lord Jim - Three main characters
- The unnamed narrator
- Marlow
- Kurtz
- Also three stations, three interruptions to the
narrative, etc. - Marlow recounts his tale while he is on a small
vessel on the Thames in London with some drinking
buddies who are ex-merchant seamen.
19A haze rested on the low shores that ran out to
sea in vanishing flatness. The air was dark above
Gravesend, and farther back still seemed
condensed into a mournful gloom, brooding
motionless over the biggest, and the greatest,
town on earth.
20Varied Interpretations
- Many different interpretations have been seen in
this book - Some see it as an attack on colonialism and a
criticism of racial exploitation - Some see Kurtz as the embodiment of all the evil
and horror of which humans are capable. - Others view it as a portrayal of one mans
journey into the primitive unconscious where the
only means of escaping the blandness of everyday
life is by self degradation.
21Heart of Darkness Themes Motifs
- Darkness and Light
- Primitive vs. Civilized
- Good vs. Evil (but look also for reversals of
this!) - Lies/Hypocrisy (Marlow chooses Kurtzs evil
versus the companys hypocrisy) - Imperialism/Colonization Cruelty, greed,
exploitation in the guise of civilizing the
natives (nb. Eliots The Hollow Men)
22Heart of Darkness Themes Motifs
- Role of Women
- Three female figures (Marlowes aunt, Kurtzs
African mistress, the Intended) - Each embodies a distinct role
- Physical connected to Psychological Barriers
(fog, thick forest, darkness, obscurity) - Rivers (connection to the past, parallels time
and the journey)
23(No Transcript)
24Review of Criticism
- Paul OPrey "It is an irony that the 'failures'
of Marlow and Kurtz are paralleled by a
corresponding failure of Conrad's
technique--brilliant though it is--as the vast
abstract darkness he imagines exceeds his
capacity to analyze and dramatize it, and the
very inability to portray the story's central
subject, the 'unimaginable', the 'impenetratable'
(evil, emptiness, mystery or whatever) becomes a
central theme." - James Guetti complains that Marlow "never gets
below the surface," and is "denied the final
self-knowledge that Kurtz had."
25Review of Criticism
- Conrad, writing in 1922, responds to similar
criticism "Explicitness, my dear fellow, is
fatal to the glamour of all artistic work,
robbing it of all suggestiveness, destroying all
illusion. You seem to believe in literalness and
explicitness, in facts and in expression. Yet
nothing is more clear than the utter
insignificance of explicit statement and also its
power to call attention away from things that
matter in the region of art." - Marlowe, the narrator, describes how difficult
conveying a story is "Do you see the story? Do
you see anything? It seems to me I am trying to
tell you a dream--making a vain attempt, because
no relation of a dream can convey the
dream-sensation, that commingling of absurdity,
surprise, and bewilderment in a tremor of
struggling revolt, that notion of being captured
by the incredible, which is the very essence of
dream . . .No, it is impossible it is impossible
to convey the life-sensation of any given epoch
of one's existence--that which makes its truth,
its meaning-- its subtle and penetrating essence.
It is impossible. We live, as we dream--alone . .
."
26Review of Criticism
- Marxist You can see Heart of Darkness as a
depiction of, and an attack upon, colonialism in
general, and, more specifically, the particularly
brutal form colonialism took in the Belgian
Congo. - the mistreatment of the Africans
- the greed of the so-called "pilgrims"
- the broken idealism of Kurtz
- the French man-of-war lobbing shells into the
jungle - the grove of death which Marlow stumbles upon
- the little note that Kurtz appends to his
noble-minded essay on The Suppression of Savage
Customs - the importance of ivory to the economics of the
system.
27Review of Criticism
- Sociological/Cultural Conrad was also apparently
interested in a more general sociological
investigation of those who conquer and those who
are conquered, and the complicated interplay
between them. - Marlow's invocation of the Roman conquest of
Britain - cultural ambiguity of those Africans who have
taken on some of the ways of their Europeans - the ways in which the wilderness tends to strip
away the civility of the Europeans and brutalize
them - Conrad is not impartial and scientifically
detached from these things, and he even has a bit
of fun with such impartiality in his depiction
the doctor who tells Marlow that people who go
out to Africa become "scientifically
interesting."
28Review of Criticism
- Psychological/Psychoanalytical Conrad goes out
of his way to suggest that in some sense Marlow's
journey is like a dream or a return to our
primitive past--an exploration of the dark
recesses of the human mind. - Apparent similarities to the psychological
theories of Sigmund Freud in its suggestion that
dreams are a clue to hidden areas of the mind - we are all primitive brutes and savages, capable
of the most appalling wishes and the most
horrifying impulses (the Id) - we can make sense of the urge Marlow feels to
leave his boat and join the natives for a savage
whoop and holler - notice that Marlow keeps insisting that Kurtz is
a voice--a voice who seems to speak to him out of
the heart of the immense darkness
29Review of Criticism
- Religious Heart of Darkness as an examination of
various aspects of religion and religious
practices. - examine the way Conrad plays with the concept of
pilgrims and pilgrimages - the role of Christian missionary concepts in the
justifications of the colonialists - the dark way in which Kurtz fulfills his own
messianic ambitions by setting himself up as one
of the local gods
30Review of Criticism
- Moral-Philosophical Heart of Darkness is
preoccupied with general questions about the
nature of good and evil, or civilization and
savagery - What saves Marlow from becoming evil?
- Is Kurtz more or less evil than the pilgrims?
- Why does Marlow associate lies with mortality?
31Review of Criticism
- Formalist
- Threes There are three parts to the story, three
breaks in the story (1 in pt. 1 and 2 in pt. 2),
and three central characters the outside
narrator, Marlow and Kurtz - Contrasting images (dark and light, open and
closed) - Center to periphery Kurtz-gtMarlow-gtOutside
Narrator-gtthe reader - Are the answers to be found in the center or on
the periphery?
32Modernism
- Heart of Darkness was published in the Late
Victorian-Early Modern Era but exhibits mostly
modern traits - a distrust of abstractions as a way of
delineating truth - an interest in an exploration of the
psychological - a belief in art as a separate and somewhat
privileged kind of human experience - a desire for transcendence mingled with a feeling
that transcendence cannot be achieved - an awareness of primitiveness and savagery as the
condition upon which civilization is built, and
therefore an interest in the experience and
expressions of non-European peoples - a skepticism that emerges from the notion that
human ideas about the world seldom fit the
complexity of the world itself, and thus a sense
that multiplicity, ambiguity, and irony--in life
and in art--are the necessary responses of the
intelligent mind to the human condition.
33Apocalypse Now
- Apocalypse Now is a film that was directed by
Francis Ford Coppola starring Martin Sheen,
Robert Duvall and Marlon Brando - This film was based on Conrads Heart of
Darkness. - Coppola takes the story to Vietnam. Captain
Willard (Marlow) is sent on a mission to kill
Colonel Kurtz who has gone renegade