Importance Of Cultural Separation In Joseph Conrad's Heart Of Darkness

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Despite attacks from literary critics as a reinforcement of Victorian colonialist hegemonies and racist paradigms, fundamentally dehumanizing of both Africans and Africa, Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness should be considered an essential anti-imperialist novella, embodied by the promotion of cultural separation, which discourse establishes anti-essentialist sentiments.

Conrad reduces the essential difference between Europeans and the Congolese to that of “a different complexion and slightly flatter noses”, using it as an argument to support the conclusive statement that “the conquest of the Earth is not a pretty thing”.
By imagining the role of Europeans and Africans reversed, he establishes that it’s no peculiarity that the Congolese are …show more content…

In a devastating critique of Heart of Darkness, Nigerian writer Achebe slams Conrad as a “bloody racist”, criticizing his “dehumanization of Africa”.
However, this critique is misjudged. The jungle is symbolically personified to promote the theme of cultural separation, by personifying Nature as wanting to “ward off” intruders. Rather than Othering the Africans, Conrad deconstructs the binary opposition between him and the Africans as well as bringing them together by confusing the beat of an African drum with his own intimate heartbeat, believing himself to have a remote kinship with them when he sees them dancing and howling. This should be evaluated in the context of contrast, his description of his isolation amongst the Europeans with whom he “had no point of contact”, operating as an essential example of …show more content…

However, the narrative structure of the novella must be emphasized. It is not intended to be a political critique on the level of Animal Farm. The text follows a stream of consciousness narration and is fundamentally based on Conrad’s imaginative perceptions and subjectivity. Due to Marlow’s (and Conrad’s) immersion in the contextual reality where imperialism was a natural part of both culture and law, he fails to imagine a world beyond the constraints of imperialism. It must be emphasized that cultural separation, however, is consistently promoted, by describxing colonialism as a “fantastic invasion”, carrying connotations of a forceful and wrongful intrusion. The imperialism is anti-essentialist, symbolic and not

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