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How Is Heart Of Darkness Dehumanize

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Heart of Darkness During Joseph Conrad’s lifetime, little trouble was made over his 1899 novel Heart of Darkness. The tale is about sailor Charles Marlow’s time as captain of an ivory-hauling steamboat on the Congo River. The novel, fixed in Conrad’s own experiences as a sailor on the Congo, vividly shows the horrors of Belgian colonial rule and the mistreatment of Africa. Many aspects of the book are nothing short of brilliant. However, in the last hundred years there has been a lot of negative feedback against Conrad’s famed novel. These negative attacks were directed toward the seemingly racist nature of Conrad’s narrative. In 1975, author Chinua Achebe analyzed Conrad’s portrayal of Africans in the book and accused Conrad of racism. However, …show more content…

For example, Marlow mentions his helmsman as a piece of machinery, and Kurtz’s African mistress is, at best, just something wild and beautiful to look at. It can be said that Heart of Darkness takes part in the oppression of nonwhites. The African people become a mere background for Marlow, a human screen that he can play out his philosophical struggles. Their existence enables his self-contemplation. This kind of dehumanization is much harder to identify than open racism of colonial violence. While Heart of Darkness offers a powerful criticism of the hypocritical actions of imperialism, it also presents a set of problems surrounding …show more content…

Indeed, the descriptions of the African people Conrad uses seem racist at first glance. For example, Conrad writes: “They shouted, sang; their bodies streamed with perspiration; they had faces like grotesque masks – these chaps; but they had bone, muscle, a wild vitality, an intense energy of movement, that was as natural and true as the surf along their coast.” (Conrad) Conrad’s description of the African faces like “grotesque masks” puts them in with all the ugly things Marlow witnesses in the Congo. However, it is not racism that makes Conrad to write these words. Instead, he presents the African people as a part of a savage, beautiful landscape that is being spoiled by Europe’s efforts to imperialize

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