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Heart Of Darkness Critical Analysis

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Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness was written in the colonial period, during Europe’s ‘Scramble for Africa’ and confronts man’s desire for dominance. Supported by Marxist writer Terry Eagleton, Heart of Darkness is a novella that holds ‘a viewpoint which disturbs imperialist assumptions to the precise degree to which it reinforces them.’ The capacity for evil portrayed in the novella contributes to the belief that Heart of Darkness is indeed a classist text. The exploration of marxism is conveyed through the dichotomy between the Africans, as the proletariat, and the Europeans, as the bourgeoisie.

Marxist critics have argued that in a capitalist society, those in power will gain more influence, while the poor are continuously oppressed and exploited. This is perceived in the novella, as the Africans had to endure the torture inflicted by the Belgians, to retrieve ivory for their trading company. Kurtz informing Marlow to ‘save the ivory’ before his death implies his obsession towards the possession and consumerist attitude of always wanting more than needed. His act of ‘grubbing for ivory in the wretched bush’ depicts a childish image of greed and jealousy and reinforces the concept of his classist attitude. He assures the natives that they cannot keep what they find, but instead, must give it to the upper class which reflects the capitalist element of a discriminatory caste system. Likewise, as Kurtz imposed himself on the natives as a deity, forced them to worship him

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