Saturday, August 3, 2019
The Light-dark Metaphor in Heart of Darkness, by Joseph Conrad Essay
   Throughout his narrative in Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness, Charlie Marlow characterizes events, ideas, and  locations that he encounters in terms of light or darkness. Embedded in Marlow's  parlance is an ongoing metaphor equating light with knowledge and civility and  darkness with mystery and savagery. When he begins his narrative, Marlow equates  light and, therefore, civility, with reality, believing it to be a tangible  expression of man's natural state. Similarly, Marlow uses darkness to depict  savagery as a vice having absconded with nature. But as he proceeds deeper into  the heart of the African jungle and begins to understand savagery as a primitive  form of civilization and, therefore, a reflection on his own reality, the  metaphor shifts, until the narrator raises his head at the end of the novel to  discover that the Thames seemed to 'lead into the heart of an immense  darkness.'' The alteration of the light-dark metaphor corresponds with Marlow's  cognizance that t   he only 'reality', 'truth', or 'light' about civilization is  that it is, regardless of appearances, unreal, absurd, and shrouded in  'darkness'.     Marlow uses the contrast between darkness and light to underscore the schism  between the seemingly disparate realms of civility and savagery, repeatedly  associating light with knowledge and truth; darkness with mystery and deceptive  evil. When Marlow realizes that his aunt's acquaintances had misrepresented him  to the Chief of the Inner Station, Marlow states, 'Light dawned upon me', as if  to explicitly associate light with knowledge or cognizance. It is significant  then, that Marlow later associates light with civilization. He describes the  knights-errant who went out from the Thames to conquer...              ... October 2002.    Available: http://www.lawrence.edu/~johnson/heart.     Conrad, Joseph. Heart of Darkness, New York: Dover, 1990.     Hayes, Dorsha. "Heart of Darkness: An Aspect of the Shadow," Spring (1956):  43-47..      Levenson, Michael. "The Value of Facts in the Heart of Darkness."  Nineteenth-Century Fiction 40 (1985):351-80.     McLynn, Frank. Hearts of Darkness: The European Exploration of Africa. New  York: Carol & Gey, 1992.      Mellard, James. "Myth and Archetype in Heart of Darkness," Tennessee Studies  in Literature 13 (1968): 1-15.     Rosmarin, Adena. "Darkening the Reader: Reader Response Criticism and Heart  of Darkness." Joseph Conrad Heart of Darkness: A Case Study in Contemporary  Criticism. Ed. Ross C. Murfin. New York: St. Martin's, 1989.     Watt, Ian. Conrad in the Nineteenth Century. San Diego: U. of California P,  1979. 168-200, 249-53.                        
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