Author: Joseph Conrad
Joseph
Conrad is remembered for novels like Heart of Darkness and Lord Jim, which drew
on his experience as a mariner and addressed profound themes of nature and
existence. Joseph Conrad is remembered for novels like Heart of Darkness and
Lord Jim, which drew on his experience as a mariner and addressed profound
themes of nature and existence. A writer of complex
skill and striking insight, but above all of an intensely personal vision, he
has been increasingly regarded as one of the greatest English novelists.
Type of Work: novella
Setting: on the deck of the Nellie; the Congo River
Main Characters: Marlow, Mr.Kurtz, The Manager, The
Accountant, The Harlequin, The Intended, Kurtz’s Native Mistress
Motifs: journey; darkness of civilization
About The Novella:
Heart of Darkness is structured as a Frame
tale, not a first-person narrative. Marlow's story is told by the
anonymous narrator who listens to Marlow on the deck of the Nellie. Conrad's frame
narrator, like the reader, learns that his ideas about European imperialism are
founded on a number of lies that he wholeheartedly believed. By the end of the
novella, Marlow's tale significantly changes the narrator's attitude toward the
ships and men of the past. Only the narrator — and the reader — understand
Marlow's initial point: "Civilized" Europe was once a "dark
place," and it has only become more morally dark through the activities of
institutions like the Company.
Charlie
Marlow finds work as a ship's commander for a trading company in Africa, near
the Congo River. He travels from France to the western African coast on a
steamer, then takes a boat to the trading company's Inner Station.
On his
journey, Marlow is appalled by the conditions of the black slaves. He arrives
to find that the boat he was to command has sunk to the bottom of the river. It
will take months to repair.
Marlow
repeatedly hears about a man named Kurtz, who also works for the trading
company. There are many rumors about Kurtz: that he's ill, that he's going to
be promoted, that he and Marlow are alike.
Marlow later
learns that Kurtz was the one who ordered an attack on the boat. He appears to
have gone mad, and the natives worship him like a god. After Kurtz dies, Marlow
returns to Europe.
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