Sunday, November 13, 2016
Symbolism in Heart of Darkness
  In his  fiction Heart of Darkness, Joseph Conrad uses the nature of the congou river as a  symbolisation to express the chaos and  develop in the heart of  both(prenominal) the conquerors and the conquered. By using symbolism, Conrad  profoundly explores the overall theme of the dehumanizing and  useless aspects of imperialism. Conrad personifies the river to symbolically reflect the feelings of the  sight being conquered. He says the river has a  spiteful aspect,  merely the  fountain does not imply that the river itself desires  retaliate,  nevertheless that the Africans desire to take revenge against the cruelty inflicted by the conquerors. In context, the africans  throw off a vengeful aspect, since they perceive the invasion as a devastating  vicissitude against their lives due to the mistreatment they receive, therefore dissent against the authority of the Europeans. Conrad writes about how the river came to have a profound  apparition within its heart, implying that all the ha   tred, disgust, vanity, and  pernicious feelings in the heart of the Europeans and the Africans figuratively  stash away in the river. In effect, the author uses personification when Marlow realizes that the river not only appe atomic number 18d dark but also hopeless, confronting the fact that the  reconditeness and pure cruelty of the  mint involved in imperialism accumulated in their once  clean-handed hearts, making their hearts as sunken stones so deeply inside the darkness that it is  unrealizable to fix the damage if imperialism pervades.\nFrom  other perspective, the river symbolizes the loss of morality as a consequence of imperialisms dehumanization. In a  later time, the speaker is shocked by observing that the river and its surroundings are so pitiless, implying that the Europeans have a merciless heart, since they frequently  tally Africans dying slowly as they make the Africans work on deplorable and inhumane conditions.  collect to imperialism, the Europeans maltreat t   he Africans by taki...   
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