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Theme Of Madness In Heart Of Darkness

Satisfactory Essays

In the novel, “Heart of Darkness” by Joseph Conrad, Conrad uses the theme of madness through different uses of nature, including human nature, to explore how man’s own morals can be challenged when thrown into difficult situations. Conrad’s readers can see how madness is posed as a question throughout the story, is madness nature induced, or is mankind born with it? Throughout the novel, Marlow faces the conflict of savagery vs. civility and whether it is the Congo that’s changing him or if an altercation hasn't taken place and madness has been within him the entire time. In “Heart of Darkness”, Conrad uses imagery elements of nature such as fog and descriptions of dense jungle along with major themes of cannibalistic nature and isolation. Conrad also explains how his characters’ perception of their everyday civility life conflicts with the ways of savagery to explain that while nature is madness-inducing, human nature is what truly drives Conrad’s characters to pure madness. Conrad’s first major representation of madness through nature is the nature aspects themselves. Conrad uses eerie elements of nature such as fog and dense jungle imagery effects through his imagery to make the characters’ feel like they’re losing their minds in the Congo. Conrad uses the fog to describe the characters sanity, as illustrated when Marlow, “turn(s) (his) shoulder to (Kurtz) in sign of (his) appreciation, and looked into the fog. How long would it last? It was the most hopeless lookout”

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