Tuesday, May 28, 2019
Modernist Style in Joseph Conrads Heart of Darkness :: Heart Darkness essays
Modernists Experiments in Heart of Darkness   In Joseph Conrads Heart of Darkness, a chaotic form of writing takes place which is characteristic of the Modernists experiments in their style of literature of stream-of-consciousness.  Written before WWI took place, he spoke of a different type of chaos and uncertainty present in the world at this time the issue of slavery.       Heart of Darkness describes a voyage to Africa, common for the British still, despite the horrific treatment which was apparent of colonization.  The chaotic, stream-of-consciousness style Conrad took on helped to pageantry the confusion, and made the reader have to witness for themselves what they thought the writer meant.  Conrad experiments with this style, leaving some sentences without ending not a sentimental pretense but an thoughtsomething you can set upand offer a sacrifice to. (Conrad, Longman p. 2195), a very choppy form of literature and causes the reader to fill in the holes and interpret themselves, alone.  Conrad skips about from talking of the two women knitted black wool feverishly at the gate of the city (of hell), to his aunt which he feels women are out of belief with truth, to how the British are as weak-eyed devil(s) of a rapacious and pitiless folly (Conrad, Longman pp. 2198, 2199, & 2202).  Conrads mind moves about as ours do along a cosmic duration of literary monologue to convey to the reader the authors ideas, as interpreted by the reader.       Conrads narrative frame also continues his experimentation with literary form in Modernist style.  Two separate monologues are present throughout Heart of Darkness.  The first part starts out with an unnamed narrator aboard the ship Nelly, describing to himself, as wholesome as to the reader, those aboard the ship, particularly Marlow.  At first, the narrator is not known for sure to be a character aboard the ship until a a couple of(prenomi nal) paragraphs later identify him as a person observing the others-Between us there was, as I have already said, (Conrad, Longman p.
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