Title: Heart of Darkness
1(No Transcript)
2Heart of Darkness
3GRAHAM GREENE, Journey without Maps (1936)
- I thought for some reason even then of Africa,
not a particular place, but a shape, a
strangeness, a wanting to know. The unconscious
mind is often sentimental I have written a
shape, and the shape, of course, is roughly that
of the human heart. - Africa will always be the Africa of the Victorian
atlas, the blank unexplored continent the shape
of the human heart.
4Factual/Historical Viewpoint
- The Congo River was discovered by Europeans in
1482 - No one traveled more than 200 miles upstream
until1877 - Is 1,600 miles long and only impassable to water
traffic between two places, creating a
two-hundred mile overland trip - Matadi (the CompanyStation)
- Kinshasa (the Central Station)
5History of the Congo
- 1878 King Leopold II of Belgium asked explorer
Henry Morton Stanley to set up a Belgian colony
in the Congo - Wanted to end slavery and civilize the natives
- Actually interested in more material benefits
- 1885 Congress of Berlin forms Congo Free State
- This was ruled by Leopold II alone
- The Congress of Berlin is referred to in the book
as the International Society for the Suppression
of Savage Customs. - Leopold never even visited the Congo. He set up
the Company to run it for him.
6Africa and Imperialism
7CONGO FREE STATE (1885)
1879-1885 Henry Morton Stanley explores the
region for Leopold II of Belgium 1890 Conrads
expedition to the Congo (Before the Congo I was
a mere animal)
8Colonial Africa, circa 1892
9Democratic Republic of the Congo
1908 Belgian Congo 1960 Independence 1964
Peoples Republic of the Congo 1971 Republic of
Zaire 1997 Democratic Republic of the Congo
10Democratic Republic of the Congo (1997)
The name of this African nation derives from a
people known as the BaKongo, first rendered as
Congo in Portuguese chronicles of exploration
in 1482. In their language, the 2,900-mile-long
Congo River is called nzadi, the river that
swallows all rivers.
11King Leopold II (reigned 1865 1909)
Belgian exploitation of the Congo initially
focused on the rubber industry.
12King Leopold and the Congo
- Belgium, as a small country, did not possess
numerous overseas colonies, unlike its
neighbours, Holland, France, Germany, and Great
Britain, but shared their imperial ambitions.
Leopold persuaded other European powers at the
Berlin Conference of 1884-85 to give him personal
possession of the Congo. - In 1876 he organized an international association
as a front for his private plan to develop
central Africa. - Leopold used the Congo as a huge money-making
resource, committing human rights violations in
the process, as he built public works projects in
Belgium with the money he accrued.
13Belgiums Stranglehold on the Congo
145-8 Million Victims (50 of Population)
It is blood-curdling to see them (the soldiers)
returning with the hands of the slain, and to
find the hands of young children amongst the
bigger ones evidencing their bravery...The rubber
from this district has cost hundreds of lives,
and the scenes I have witnessed, while unable to
help the oppressed, have been almost enough to
make me wish I were dead... This rubber traffic
is steeped in blood, and if the natives were to
rise and sweep every white person on the Upper
Congo into eternity, there would still be left a
fearful balance to their credit. -- Belgian
Official
15White King, Red Rubber, Black Death
- Countries such as France, the Netherlands, and
Great Britain that acquired large empires
exploited both land and people. However - Some measures to protect the rights of overseas
subjects were introduced. - Rights of women and men to vote.
- Protection against industrial exploitation was
making child labour illegal and improving
employment conditions. - Some of these rights were followed in the African
colonies..but NOT BY LEOPOLD II - Leopold had to give up the Congo to Belgium in
1908 as a result of the international campaign
exposing Leopolds activities in the Congo.
16King Leopolds Ghost
- Novel by Adam Hochschild written in 1998
- Tells the horrific story of King Leopolds
colonial rule over a country and its native
peoples. - Based on the true story of the colonial
activities. - King Leopold II, never set foot in the Congo, but
managed to ruin a countryhis ghost remains today
in memories of the Congolese.
17The Explorer Stanleys Role
- H. M. Stanley, a journalist who explored the
Congo on an expedition financed by King Leopold
of Belgium. - Stanley greatly aided his backer in gaining a
firm foothold in what was to become the Belgian
Congo (later Zaire), now the Democratic Republic
of Congo. - King Leopold II never set foot in Africa.
18The White Mans Burden
- King Leopold found the Congocursed by
cannibalism, savagery, and despair and he has
been trying with patience, which I can never
sufficiently admire, to relieve it of its
horrors, rescue it from its oppressors, and save
it from perdition. --H.M. Stanley
The idea that Europeans must carry the burden of
civilizing Africa.
19Different Motives of Imperialism
- Some Westerners felt it was their duty to
civilize the savage inhabitant of colonial
lands in order to make them more modern and
European. The English writer Rudyard Kipling
displayed such an attitude in 1899 with a poem
entitle The White Mans Burden.
Take up the White Mans burden-- Send forth the
best ye breed-- Go bind your sons to exile To
serve your captives need To wait in heavy
harness, On fluttered folk and wild-- Your
new-caught, sullen peoples, Half-devil and
half-child.
20The White Mans Burden?
The first step toward lightening the White Mans
Burden is through teaching the virtues of
cleanliness!
Pears Soap is a potent factor in brightening the
dark corners of the earth as civilization
advances, while amongst the cultured of all
nations, it holds the highest place-it is the
ideal toilet soap.
21Ivory and the White Mans Burden
- Most Europeans in the 1890s felt that the African
peoples needed exposure to European culture and
technology to become more evolved. - This responsibility was known as the white mans
burden and the fervor to bring Christianity and
commerce to Africa grew. - In return for these benefits, the Europeans
extracted HUGE amounts of ivory.
22Ivory, cont.
- Uses of ivory in the 1890s
- Jewelry and other decorative items
- Piano keys
- Billiard balls
- From 1888 to 1892, the amount of ivory exported
from the Congo rose from 13,000 pounds to more
than a quarter million pounds. - 1892 Leopold declares all natural resources in
the Congo are his sole property - This gave the Belgians free reign to take
whatever they wanted however they wished. - Trade expands, new stations are established
farther and farther away
23The Results of Ivory Fever
- Documented atrocities committed by the Belgian
ivory traders include the severing of hands and
heads. - Reports of this, combined with Conrads portrayal
of the system in Heart of Darkness, led to an
international protest movement against Belgiums
presence in Africa - Leopold outlawed these practices, but his decree
had little effect - Belgian parliament finally took control away from
the king - Belgium did not grant independence to the Congo
until 1960
24Cecil Rhodes (1853-1902)
Uncle Sam The Colossus of the Pacific (A
Parody)
The Colossus of Rhodes
25Joseph Conrads Life
- Born Josef Teodore Konrad Nalecz Korzeniowski,
inPodolia, Ukraine, 3 December1857. - Conrads father and mother,Apollo and Ewa, were
politicalactivists. They were imprisoned 7
months and eventually deported to Vologda. - Apollo introduced him son to the work of Dickens,
Fenimore Cooper and Captain Marryat in Polish and
French translations.
26Joseph Conrads Life
- His father died of tuberculosis and his funeral
was attended by a thousand admirers - Conrad was raised by his uncle attended school
(he was disobedient) - In 1874, Conrad went to Marseilles, France, and
joined the Merchant Navy. - Gun running for the Spanish and a love affair led
to a suicide attempt. - Conrad became a British merchant sailor and
eventually a master mariner and citizen in 1886.
His ten years in the British Merchant Marine
shaped most of his stories.
27Joseph Conrads Life
- Conrad traveled widely in the east.
- He took on a stint as a steamer captain (1890) in
the Congo, but became ill within three months and
had to leave. - Conrad retired from sailing and took up writing
full time. - Died of a heart attack in 1924.
- Buried in Canterbury Cathedral.
28Heart of Darkness
- First published as a serial in Londons Blackwood
Magazine in 1899 - First unified publication in1902
- Considered by many to be the finest short novel
ever written in English - Bridges the Victorian and Modern literary periods
- Modern criticism sharply divided over merit due
to racist/imperialist themes
29Heart 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
- He had to leave early for the job, as the
previous captain was killed in a trivial quarrel
30Heart of Darkness Background
- 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 men from the chain gangs building the
railroads. - He found his ship was damaged.
- Dysentary was rampant as was malaria Conrad had
to terminate his contract due to illness and
never fully recovered
31Heart of Darkness Narrative 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 Youth A
Narrative and Lord Jim - Marlow recounts his tale while he is on a small
vessel on the Thames with some drinking buddies
who are ex-merchant seamen. As he recounts his
story the group sits in an all-encompassing
darkness.
32Narrative Structure of Heart of Darkness
33Contrasts in Heart of Darkness
- Light vs. Dark
- Heavy vs. Light
- Inferiority vs. Superiority
- Civil vs. Savage
- Interior vs. Exterior
- Illusion vs. Truth
- Misogyny vs. Misanthropy
- Insanity vs. Sanity
- Racism vs. Anti-racism
- Imperialism vs. Insularity
- Evil
- What makes well-intentioned people do bad things?
34Heart of Darkness Motifs
- Darkness
- Primitive Impulses (Kurtz, previous captain,
etc.) - Cruelty of Man (Kurtz and Company)
- Immorality/Amorality (Kurtz)
- Lies/Hypocrisy (Marlow chooses Kurtzs evil
versus Companys hypocritical evil) - Imperialization/Colonization (Belgian Company)
- Greed / Exploitation of People
- Power Corrupts
- Savage vs. Civil
35Heart of Darkness Motifs
- Role of Women
- Civilization exploitive of women
- Civilization as a binding and self-perpetuating
force - Physical connected to Psychological
- Barriers (fog, thick forest)
- Rivers (connection to past, parallels time and
journey)
36(No Transcript)
37Varied Interpretations
- Some feel the novel offers a scathing attack on
colonialist ideology, others feel the novel
celebrates and defends colonialization and
racism. - Some see Kurtz as the embodiment of all the evil
and horror of capitalist society. - Others view it as a portrayal of one mans
journey into the primitive unconscious where one
must confront ones own inner darkness. - Still others see it as a modern journey quest,
perhaps with an anti-hero rather than a hero.
38Criticism Early and Modern
- Early
- Hailed as a portrayal of the demoralizing effect
life in the African wilderness supposedly had on
European men - Praised as a study of the collapse of the white
mans morality when he is released from the
restraints of European law and order
- Modern
- Criticized for the blatantly racist attitudes it
portrays - Some believe Conrad was simply reflecting the
attitudes held common at the time - Others believe he may have been holding the ideas
up for scorn and ridicule
39Victorian and Modern Literature
- Victorian (1837 1901)
- Traditional subject matter, form, and style
- Deals with issues of the day, including
- Social, economic, religious, and intellectual
issues - Industrial Revolution
- Class tensions, early feminist movement,
pressures for social and political reform - Impact of Darwins theories on evolution
- Modern (post WWI WWII)
- Authors experiment with subject matter, form, and
style - Deals with issues of the day, including
- Horrors of WWI
- Massive loss of life
- Loss of faith
- Expanding technology and science
- Also encompassed/is related to Postmodernism
40Review of Criticism
- Paul OPrey It is an irony that the failures
of Marlow and Kurtz are paralleled by a
corresponding failure of Conrads
techniquebrilliant though it isas the vast
abstract darkness he imagines exceeds his
capacity to analyze and dramatize it, and the
very inability to portray the storys 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.?
41Review 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.
42Review of Criticism
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 dreammaking 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 ones existencethat which makes its truth,
its meaningits subtle and penetrating essence.
It is impossible. We live, as we dreamalone.
43Review 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 upon which Marlow stumbles
- 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.
44Review 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. - Marlows 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.
45Review of Criticism
- Psychological/Psychoanalytical Conrad goes out
of his way to suggest that in some sense Marlows
journey is like a dream or a return to our
primitive pastan 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 voicea voice who seems to speak to him out of
the heart of the immense darkness
46Review 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
47Review 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?
48Review of Criticism
- Formalist Focus on the literary patterns and
structures inherent in Heart of Darkness - 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?
49Review of Criticism
- Modernism Heart of Darkness published in the
Late Victorian Era 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 and interest in primitiveness and
savagery as the condition upon which civilization
is built - a skepticism and a sense that multiplicity,
ambiguity, and ironyin life and in artare the
necessary responses of the intelligent mind to
the human condition.
50Movie Versions of the Book
51Apocalypse Now
- Apocalypse Now is a film 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
52Circle of Influence
- Thomas Pynchon
- T.S. Eliot
- Ernest Hemingway
- F. Scott Fitzgerald
- William Faulkner
- Gabriel Garcia Marquez
- Mario Vargas Llosa
- Jorge Luis Borges
- Carlos Fuentes
- George Orwell
- Saul Bellow
- Eugene ONeill
- Graham Greene
53Joseph Conrads Other Works
- Almayers Folly (1895)
- The Nigger of the Narcissus (1897)
- Lord Jim (1900)
- Heart of Darkness (1902)
- Typhoon (1902)
- Nostromo (1904)
- The Secret Sharer (1907)
- Under Western Eyes (1910)
- Chance (1914)