Summary
Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness remains one of the most analyzed and controversial works of English literature more than a century after its 1899 debut. The story follows Charles Marlow's harrowing journey up the Congo River in search of the mysterious ivory trader Kurtz. Through Marlow's narration, Conrad offers a searing critique of European colonialism in Africa while exploring themes of power, morality, and the darkness within human nature. This chilling novella was the basis for Francis Ford Coppola's 1979 film Apocalypse Now, which transplants the story to the Vietnam War.
Plot
In Heart of Darkness, the narrator Charles Marlow recounts his journey up the Congo River as captain of a steamboat for an ivory trading company. Marlow becomes fascinated with the mysterious figure of Kurtz, a highly successful ivory trader who has supposedly gone mad in the African jungle. As Marlow travels deeper into the continent, he encounters scenes of brutal exploitation of the native Africans by European colonizers.
When Marlow finally reaches Kurtz's remote outpost, he finds that Kurtz has set himself up as a godlike figure among the local natives, surrounding his house with severed heads on stakes. Kurtz is severely ill, and Marlow takes him aboard the steamboat to return downriver. On the journey back, Kurtz entrusts Marlow with a packet of personal documents, including a report he had written for “The Society for the Suppression of Savage Customs.” Kurtz dies on the boat, uttering his final words: “The horror! The horror!"
Upon returning to Europe, Marlow is left deeply disturbed by his experiences. When he visits Kurtz's fiancée, who is still in mourning a year after his death, Marlow lies and tells her that Kurtz's last words were her name.
Themes
Colonialism and imperialism
Darkness and light as symbols
Racism and dehumanization
Madness and obsession
Morality and ethics in extreme conditions
The nature of good and evil
Alienation and isolation
Setting
Heart of Darkness is set in the late 19th century during the height of European colonialism in Africa. The story takes place primarily along the Congo River in what was then known as the Congo Free State, a private colony of Belgium's King Leopold II.