Persuasive essay on Racism in Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness

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Danielle Morris

Brady

English 3AP

16 April 2010

Persuasive essay on Racism in “Heart of Darkness”

        While reading the novella, “Heart of Darkness” one might develop a theory that Joseph Conrad describes the villagers in Africa to be scavengers, and portrays them as an inhuman species. Some, like Chinua Achebe, could argue that he is racist toward the Africans in “Heart of Darkness”. In Achebe’s essay about the novella he describes Conrad as “less charitable to the Europeans”, and that the point of the story is to “ridicule Europe’s civilizing mission in Africa,” In his essay Achebe gives many reasons to support this theory, and many examples in “Heart of Darkness” that displays Conrad’s prejudice toward the natives in the story.

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        When reading “Heart of Darkness” the reader can clearly comprehend the bias towards the natives that the main character Marlow portrays while telling the story. Marlow describes the villagers as scavengers, and illustrates them to be barbaric and inhumane. As a professor at the University of Massachusetts, teaching African history, Achebe is very well educated in African society and what was like during this time. He describes Conrad’s view of the African society to be a display to the Europeans of his interpretation of the African culture which was ruthless and uncultured. One of the main examples for the story ...

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