Heart of Darkness White Lies
By: July • Research Paper • 4,505 Words • May 21, 2010 • 1,164 Views
Heart of Darkness White Lies
Heart of Darkness: White Lies
Joseph Conrad's slender volume Heart of Darkness, published serially in Blackwood's Magazine in
1899, has probably received more critical attention per page than any other prose work. Layer
after layer has been examined and analysed, and continually they seem to lead on to
increasingly abstract strata. Critics have demonstrated how Marlow, fundamentally unreliable
and partial in his capacity of first-person narrator, becomes involved in the action and is
gradually changed by the events he describes. Using time-shifts and varying vantage points, he
takes the puzzled readers as well as the listeners on board the Nellie along the borderlines of
consciousness and reality. Like the narrator, we are allowed to "peep over the edge" into the
dark abyss, as it were, but still the novel teases like a dream, contradictory and intriguing.
According to E. M. Forster, among others, Conrad's obscurity mediates a kind of double vision
caused by discrepancies between his nearer and his further vision: "What is so elusive about
him is that he is always promising to make some general philosophic statement about the
universe, and then refraining with a gruff disclaimer" (Forster, 134-5).
The novel, concluding
with Marlow's lie to the Intended, is expressive of a sense of utter disillusionment, in stark
contrast with nineteenth-century historians' optimistic view of humanity continually moving
towards full understanding. In Conrad's book, paradoxically, ultimate truth is expressed
through a lie. In keeping with the ambience of fin de si3cle, on psychological, social and
religious reading levels the storyline heads towards "the end" in the sense of ultimate darkness,
a condition of meaninglessness and nihilism, negating all civilized values.
Part of the puzzlement which has been felt about this story has come about as a result
of dividing it into a series of interrelated layers, and the fact that in the first half of the book
there is a predominant emphasis on the picture of colonialism, whereas in the second half we
find a concentration on the implied author's notions of existential unease and metaphysical
evil. Whether critics prefer predominantly psychological, archetypal or political
interpretations, they broadly agree that the novel is strangely "modern" in outlook and
obviously resists simple readings. Clearly, it explores characteristic Conradian themes such as
the concept of "evil" and the hazardous predicament of social isolation. It is true that Conrad
has been criticized for being vague and unclear, but it has also been argued that the notion of
evil can never be fully defined, and that the book becomes "powerful precisely to the extent
that it is not precise"; its mistiness is part of the structure and Kurtz's unspeakable rites must
necessarily "remain unspoken" (Murfin, 101, and Cox, 56). Consequently, when discussing the
notion of "white lies" in the context of Conrad's novel this discussion will offer no new
varieties of psychological or religious interpretation. Instead it will focus on aspects of fin de
si3cle in the author's political, social and private background. Besides internationally wellknown
Conrad criticism I will also draw from historical source material contained in the
Swedish writer cum journalist Sven Lindqvist's part documentary part autobiographical book
Utrota varenda j#vel ("Exterminate all the brutes").