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European Colonialism and Joseph Conrad i n preparation for reading Heart of Darkness. Pre-Colonial Africa: 7 th -16 th centuries. Another image of pre-colonial Africa. “The scramble for Africa”: European colonization (beginning in 17 th c., height in 19 th -early 20 th c.).
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European Colonialism and Joseph Conradin preparation for reading Heart of Darkness
“The scramble for Africa”: European colonization (beginning in 17th c., height in 19th-early 20th c.)
…leading to all sorts of historical repercussions, including: • The Partition of India (1947): 200,000 to 1,000,000 people died. 75,000 to 100,000 women were kidnapped or raped. • The Vietnam War (1956-1975): started as an anticolonial war between Vietnam and France (its colonizer) and then the brunt of the conflict transferred to the U.S. • Arguably, many of the civil wars in Africa • The Irish Famine and Troubles in Northern Ireland • The genocide of Native Americans and Australian Aborigines • Slavery
Africa today (sort of)the newest nation is South Sudan, founded July 2011
“Postcolonial” • is a term used for a particular kind of literature as well as a theory used to analyze/critique literature, history, society, etc. • Postcolonial work critiques a worldview that may champion: the global West and North (“first-world” nations), Christianity, whiteness, capitalism, democracy • Postcolonialism often champions: the poor and disenfranchised, people who have been excluded from history based on racial, ethnic, and religious grounds, alternative histories, radical politics (esp. Marxism), people of nations that have been exploited by wealthier nations or international corporations (today, often the U.S. or U.S.-based companies)
Postcolonialism responds to… Colonialism • There is also colonialist literature • This literature supports the cause of colonialism: usually a belief that Western nations have a moral authority to “civilize” the “uncivilized” people of the earth by spreading their own values and culture. • This often includes democracy, capitalism, and Christianity
As you read Heart of Darkness… • Consider whether you think the book supports or critiques European colonialism. • Please note that Conrad does use the “n-word” in this text. I do not expect you to simply accept this or feel comfortable with it. Instead, perhaps notice when and why he uses it. Also remember that to conflate author and character is a fallacy. Which character(s) use this word and why?
Modern readers are often dismayed by the racist language in Heart of Darkness. Apologists often argue that you have to remember that in 1890, when Conrad did his trip up the Congo River, things were different. But were they? How was the word "nigger" was perceived in 1890? The word "nigger," like Negro, Niger, and the archaic slang word "neger," come from the Latin root for black. According to Stuart Flexner, in his 1976 book I Hear America Talking: . . . At any rate, "nigger" was a common word in both England and America by the 17th century; it was just considered a pronunciation of "Negro" until around 1825, when both abolitionists and Blacks began to object to it as disparaging. Then after the Civil War "nigger" became the most common contemptuous word for a Black. (i) For those who would argue that England was different, Dorothy Hammond and Alta Jablow demonstrate in The Africa That Never Was (1970) that the word "nigger" had fallen into disrepute by the 1880s": No issue was taken with the word or its use at this time, though some in positions of administrative responsibility, clearly aware of its pejorative content, eschewed its use. In this connection it is noteworthy that [Sir Harry] Johnston [writing in the 1880s] occasionally lapses into using the word, but discreetly, hemmed in by quotation marks. Later, when he became Proconsul of British Empire in Africa, he did not use the term at all." (100) There is little doubt, then, that Conrad would have been aware in 1898 that the word "nigger" was derogatory. From http://www.utm.edu/staff/lalexand/brnovel/Heart.htm
Joseph Conrad • (1857-1924) • Was actually Polish (born there when it was part of Imperial Russia) • Became a British citizen in 1886 • English was his third language, after Polish and French • His writing straddles the end of the Victorian era and the beginning of Modernism • Worked as a merchant marine, including for a Belgian company in the Congo