Saturday, December 21, 2019
Joseph Conradââ¬â¢s Heart of Darkness Through a Freudian Lens
Without personal access to authors, readers are left to themselves to interpret literature. This can become challenging with more difficult texts, such as Joseph Conradââ¬â¢s novella Heart of Darkness. Fortunately, literary audiences are not abandoned to flounder in pieces such as this; active readers may look through many different lenses to see possible meanings in a work. For example, Conradââ¬â¢s Heart of Darkness may be deciphered with a post-colonial, feminist, or archetypal mindset, or analyzed with Freudian psycho-analytic theory. The latter two would effectively reveal the greater roles of Kurtz and Marlow as the id and the ego, respectively, and offer the opportunity to draw a conclusion about the work as a whole. Sigmund Freudââ¬â¢sâ⬠¦show more contentâ⬠¦His European-influenced judgements of many of the things he sees ââ¬â such as the valley of death, where Marlow stands ââ¬Å"horror-struckâ⬠(Conrad 84), and the pilgrimsââ¬â¢ ââ¬Å"little fu nâ⬠with the Winchesters as the boat departs Kurtzââ¬â¢s Inner Station ââ¬â are not shared by anyone around him (151). His active super-ego allows Marlow to impose European moral codes over himself in and his perceptions of Africa. Others, all of whom lack such a faculty, lost when they entered Africa what civilization they possessed in Europe. Throughout his time in Africa, Marlow is able to adhere to the demands of his super-ego, and this affects his friendsââ¬â¢ perception of him when he returns to England. They are only human, while Marlow seems to have transcended his humanity: he ââ¬Å"[sits] apartâ⬠from them, ââ¬Å"indistinct and silent,â⬠like ââ¬Å"a meditating Buddhaâ⬠(164). His account of the time before his departure for Africa indicates that he too was simply human at that time; he became Buddha-like sometime in the course of his travels. The point of his ascention from humanity is clear when another method of interpretation is applied . When Marlow and Kurtz are viewed as archetypes of the ego and the id, the story as a whole takes on a greater metaphorical meaning. Marlowââ¬â¢s journey is not to Africa; he travels into his own mind, and the forest is his unconscious. Marlow sets out to discover and
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