sorry I haven't read much lately. was listening to lectures on Russian literature. hard to read one book while actually studying others... and btw, Gogol finally got here, now that I'm done with the lectures. oh well. more on that later I'm sure lol.
"Heart of Darkness", Joseph Conrad. interesting.
Marlow is a seaman who, on an exploration impulse, secures captaincy of a fresh-water steamboat in the Congo, and embarks on a journey with the mission to find out what has happened to the Company Agent Kurtz, deep in the jungle interior.
it might sound familiar... Apocalypse Now.
based on the introduction by Joyce Carol Oates: "Coppola transformed 'Heart of Darkness' into a grotesque melodrama set in Vietnam in the waning years of the Vietnam War. In the role of Marlow, an American army officer is sent to Cambodia to assassinate a renegade Green Beret colonel who has set himself up, like Kurtz, as a murderous madman-god. Imaginative in concept and vivid in execution, Apocalypse Now is underminded by the ludicrous overacting of marlon Brando in the role of Kurtz, which neither he nor his director seems to have understood."
I had to do a college paper on Francis Ford Coppola's Apocalypse Now, wish I still had that. dealt with assassins and everything ;)
but "Heart of Darkness" was written in 1902, based on Conrad's own 1890 trip up the Congo river, back when that part of Africa was personally owned by King Leopold II of Belgium. (and the character Kurtz was based on a man named Georges Antoine Klein, an employee of the Brussels-based trading company Societe Anonyme Belge pour le Commerce du Haut-Congo.)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Congo_Free_State
Leopold was eventually forced to hand over control of that land to the Belgian government because... well because out of all the atrocities being carried out on the African continent, the worst were in the "Congo Free State". a open letter about what was going on in the Congo Free State sparked one of the first ever international outcries on human rights in the world. conquering and colonial peoples were badly behaved all over Africa, but in the CFS this reached heights that even bothered other empirical sorts.
The baskets of severed hands, set down at the feet of the European post commanders, became the symbol of the Congo Free State. ... The collection of hands became an end in itself. Force Publique soldiers brought them to the stations in place of rubber; they even went out to harvest them instead of rubber... They became a sort of currency. They came to be used to make up for shortfalls in rubber quotas, to replace... the people who were demanded for the forced labour gangs; and the Force Publique soldiers were paid their bonuses on the basis of how many hands they collected.
I'll leave Cambodia to Apocalypse Now, but the Congo Free State was definitely its own brand of hell.
this is the land (at that time, that piece of history so to speak) that Joseph Conrad apparently equates with the unknown regions of the human soul.
ouch... I mean, even I am not that jaded or cynical. I think I do have to agree with some of his critics that Conrad is an overly morbid fellow. I'm sure if I had seen what was going on and lived through that myself, I'd be quite macabre in my description of it as well. but I still don't think I'd equate it with the soul.
if it is a statement on the corruptibility of the human soul, then, yes. I agree completely.
if it is saying that in the unknown, untamed, unrealized parts of us, no matter who we are, in the heart of every man, lurks an overpowering and unredeemable evil... well then I'll have to be a dork and say, only the Shadow knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men ;)
if it is a statement of the white empire-mongering soul or that element of humanity... eh well maybe I suppose; it still seems a bit dramatic to me. (and besides, if that bit I went on about re: Dostoevsky where all humanity is one soul were true, then that means if one human soul is like that, then all human souls are like that, because there's really just one soul anyway.)
it is strange to me that "Heart of Darkness" is famous for its symbolism (esp regarding the human soul), because when I read it I find it very heavy-handed with the symbolism, like trying to pound a square peg through a round hole, straight into our brains already. it doesn't seem to work for me.
maybe part of it is because I am not afraid of the dark. to me, darkness is not the place where monsters lurk, not even monsters who are really me in disguise. darkness is a quiet place, mostly, away from the judgement of society, where you can be yourself and not be condemned for it. that does not necessarily imply that what you really are is so hideous that you have to hide it away from the world. for me, it's closer to say that the world is so hideous that you have to hide yourself away from it.
(lol, now who's being dismal? well the truth is somewhere between the two extremes!)
now of course there has been (especially among pigment-impaired people from whose stock I am descended) a long-standing tradition of symbolism where white is purity and good and holy and black is evil and evil and evil. and dirtiness. so if you're going to be traditional about it, then okay I get it. but how many times are you going to mention it? it is the dominant theme of the book. not only darkness literally, but anything that is dark, which apparently includes every African alive. they are all evil. symbolically... okay. evil black people in an evil black dark in the evil black corners of your soul... hmmm.
the other dominant theme is Kurtz, who is also hammered into our brains. Marlon Brando might have overacted the part, but Willard (& any other characters) didn't go on and on and on and on about Kurtz all the way throughout the movie. so... Marlon might have overacted the role of Kurtz, but Marlow overnarrated the role of Kurtz. basically Kurtz is just a normal kind of guy ( and NOT the superhero genius poet whatever everyone thinks he is) who let power go to his head and then couldn't face the consequences.
I don't know if the prejudices (as well-formed and permanent as the strongest steel) in this book were Conrad's personally, or Marlow's as a representative of the time, but egads. white men are gods, black men are devils, and women are holy fools whose lives are constructed entirely of lies fed to them by men. some of it is symbolism, some not. some of it is reductionism, some not. and some of it might be a commentary against? his own society, but then again, maybe not.
I think it's interesting that the "Heart of Darkness" was told not from Marlow's perspective directly, but from the perspective of somebody listening to Marlow tell his tale. so this might possibly represent the author's removal from Marlow's character? I wonder if anyone ever asked him if Marlow's character in "Heart of Darkness" was meant to be him, or a another real person, or a combination of the two, or what...
really, Marlow (as well as all the other characters) was just as guilty and depraved as Kurtz--- Marlow might not have beaten anybody or killed anybody etc directly, but all around him was the starkest hell, and he never even questioned it. he never tried to help the dying or tried to ease the suffering of the enslaved... instead he cursed them and hated them and then worshipped the accountant who dressed neatly and wore cologne in all this chaos.
from my point of view, the dark, the black, was not the evil at all. quite the opposite, all the way through the book.*** more in next post
I wonder if he saw it that way, or meant it that way, even. eh probably not, but it is much more fitting.
Kurtz' mourning fiancee was really pathetic... this maybe is due to Conrad's views on women? or maybe he was making a statement about the absurdity of it all?
Marlow's "loyalty"... to this white devil, Kurtz . ironic, at least. when he sees Kurtz and hears Kurtz all around him in the civilized town, in the street, in the door, at the fiancee's house... fitting, in an ironic way. not disturbing the way that it seems to be meant though.
the horror, the horror. ;)
I guess it would be a 3.5? not sure. it's hard to rate such a novella. it is written in the style of the 1890's as well. I still think the imagery is entirely overdone and the wording is heavy-handed and grandiose. only 100 pages though.
----
from my point of view, the dark, the black, was not the evil at all. quite the opposite, all the way through the book.*** more in next post
regardless of how Conrad meant his symbolism (I'm pretty sure he meant it the way it seemed; dark=evil and all), this is a much more profound book if you read it
from a Transcendental point of view.
I will try to come back to this and fill it out more when possible; I wanted to get the idea down while I had the right words and before I left to buy bananas. ;)
but the main jist of it is--- read "Heart of Darkness" as a comment on the invertedness of the real order of things, an ironic judgement of the situation. see how all that darkness is emphasized as evil, and see men dying and degraded with not a thought, and see how the wildness of it all is portrayed as madness and chaos and terror, etc---- while keeping in your own mind an emphasis on the divine in nature and of the pristine beauty of untouched lands, on the value of the individual and the inherent worth of people and personal intuition, and on belief in a spiritual reality that might transcend one's own sensory experience to provide a more useful guide for daily living than is possible from purely empirical and logical reasoning.
in short, turn it on its head.
I can't help it. I grew up with Mark Twain, Louisa May Alcott, Emily Dickinson, Whalt Witman, Thoreau, Emerson, you get the idea.
I'm not sure we can classify Emily Dickinson as an optimist, per se... she surely wrote about Death an amazing lot, but when she did it, it was truer and not as dismally shrouded as Joseph Conrad's portrayals.