There is culture everywhere. It exists in art, music, tradition, religion, language and law. Culture is difficult to ignore, as people grow and become an environment that makes us humans today. Joseph Conrad's "darkness of the mind" of these three books is shared by Chinua Akeve and studied by Bruce Filer, the center of Japan, discussing the impact of different cultures and their coexistence with them. When two unfamiliar cultures coexist, both cultural groups are affected.
Cultural clashes on the Internet 's Internet and Dark Heart culture define the people' s perception of evil, the place it gives to women, and the relationship with other cultures. When white people serve as missionaries, communicate with Africans and try to live, two different cultures begin to fuse. - Compare Heaney 's Open Field Culture with God' s Culture of Roy 's Little Things Many writers use their life' s experience to influence their writing. In the case of Seamus Heaney and Arundati Roy, their life experiences and experiences in their countries have shaped their poems and stories in ways that they can not imagine. For example, Heaney added a lot of experience from his country in Ireland to his poem.
Separation of the center of darkness and things shows different ways Africa is presented in literature. In the dark heart, Joseph Conrad showed Africa from the perspective of European colonial people. And they tended to depict all local people as barbarians. In response to the Conrad's African stereotypical description, Cinnave Cave was not a prototype but a member of a rich society, wrote "collapse of things" from the perspective of local people to show Africans. Since he fought for prestige in the community, things left Okonkwo 's life. When a European missionary came to Umm Ophia, a family of Okonkou, Okonkow tried to protect the culture that missionaries would destroy under the name of "civilized" locals. But his strict spirit and violence are contrary to his expectations, with the eyes of European readers continuing the stereotypes of wild Africans.