Joseph Conrad, the center of colonialism and darkness, strongly attacks colonialism and its influence, affecting not only local residents but colonists of invasion. Conrad passed through a boy colonized in Poland under the occupation of Russia. When he was directing a river ship in the Dutch Congo, he also saw the influence of colonialism on colonialists. He conveyed these experiences through his eyes Mahlow 's eyes. He is also the captain of a river ship.
Polish novelist Joseph Conrad is dealing with the same colonialism in his novel "Dark heart". It is easy for the reader to regard the 'dark heart' as a special barbaric form adopted by the explanation and attack on colonialism, and more specifically by the colonialism of Belgium / Congo. The whole story of this book is reflected in Conrad's own experience in Conrad in 1890. Conrad tells his story through Marlow's character and he tells the bad truth he found in the center of the jungle.
Joseph Conrad, the center of colonialism and darkness, strongly attacks colonialism and its influence, affecting not only local residents but colonists of invasion. Conrad passed through a boy colonized in Poland under the occupation of Russia. When he was directing a river ship in the Dutch Congo, he also saw the influence of colonialism on colonialists. He told these experiences through his own role Marlow ... Orwell and colonial eyes I wondered if other people grabbed me to avoid just looking like a fool thought. "A sharp remembrance on the events of George Orwell's British imperialists is over, from the African point of view, about the colonialism about southern, Orwell is like Joseph Conrad in the dark Orwell Served with Myanmar's imperialist police, and it is still part of Myanmar.
Beyond the words of the book that made us tense in 1996, we can see that the dark heart is a tough criticism of colonialism. Only when it was suggested that colonialism could not function properly, a dark heart came. This time seems like the highest point of the empire, it is a time when Africa is optimistic about colonialism. However, Conrad was lurking on the floor of "Pax Britannica" whispering as "selling, selling". Imperialism is the central theme of this book, but not just imperialism. Conrad personally explained this in various documents. For example, in a letter from 1899, Conrad wrote that the idea behind "the dark heart" is "efficiency and a purely selfish crime in the solution of African civilization work". In 1902, he wrote to the critic that the center of the darkness is as follows: