preview

Self Control In Joseph Conrad's Heart Of Darkness

Good Essays

Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness explores the mysteries of human corruption and its effects on the mind. Within the confines of the text, the jungle reveals a coiled snake, lying in wait, ready to sink its teeth into the darkness within Kurtz. As a result of being removed from his former social context and allowed to be the sole arbiter of his own actions, Africa becomes responsible for his mental disintegration, leading to him becoming blind to his greed for the ivory trapping him within the confines of the jungle. Kurtz’s madness eventually becomes a physical aspect, so that his bodily sickness is a reflection of his diseased mind. Through Kurtz’s, Conrad exposed the ugliness in people, uncensored and truthful. He wanted to show that evil is a human entity, which anyone acting without the requirement or moral restraint can become so degenerated that anything is possible, so long as they are free to do it. People become evil when we abandon our morals and the ability to do what is right from what is wrong. A single influential being or thing, whether we accept it or not, could drastically change our moral self control. In no time this makes people change the way they think. Conrad, showed that as humans everyone is physiologically able to extensively break down and alter their existing train of thought. Whether this is about transitioning from good to evil or from happy to depressed. It’s all driven from a compelling force.
"The original Kurtz had been educated partly in

Get Access