Over 10 million Africans were killed in the Congo during the invasion of European imperialists in 1810. In the darkness, Joseph Conrad used this scene to illustrate the adverse effects on European imperialist thought, Africa and the complex creepy people. A capitalist European company was greed. In this book, Africa can be seen as a role in the fight against intruders. The letters in the book remain in Africa, but they find their hearts badly damaged.
Heart of Darkness is in Congo. No, let's look back. It is not actually in Congo. Instead, this is the story that we guessed in Congo, Marlow said from the barge of the Thames. The reality of dark heart is that we will not leave Thames all the time. Even before that, when Conrad wrote the center of the darkness, the British colonial empire reached a climax during the fictional era Marlowe went to Congo. Britain was an outstanding world power in the late nineteenth century. She has colonies around the world including India, Malaya, Hong Kong and most of Africa. England dominates the road to the Suez Canal and the source of the Nile on the east coast of Africa
The Heart of Darkness (1899) is a novel about the Congo River entering the center of the African Congo Free State, by Polish British novelist Joseph Conrad. The narrator Charles Marlow speaks to a friend who is parked on a boat on the River Thames. This setting will provide him an ivory deal Kurtz. It creates what Marcolo's story framework, Conrad's obsessed, in parallel with the dark places of London and Africa calls "the greatest town on the planet"
Joseph Conrad 's novel "Darkness of the Mind" tells a man named Marlow that traveled in the center of Africa - Congo. Although implied, the actual dark heart points not only to the center of the Congo but also to ourselves as the center of mankind. In the process of his encounter with ambiguous Mr. Kurz, Mahlow saw several unique people, some of which were not accustomed to Congo. Three of them were particularly striking and helped Marlow understand his real experience in Congo. These people are administrators of accountants, brickworkers and Marlow works.