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Joseph Riley McCormack Professor Alan Somerset English 020 Section 007
Submission Date: March 22, 2000 Colonization in the Theme of A Modest Proposal
and Heart of Darkness Starting at the beginning of the seventeenth century,
European countries began exploring and colonizing many different areas of the
world. The last half of the nineteenth century saw the height of European
colonial power around the globe. France, Belgium, Germany, and especially Great
Britain, controlled over half the world. Along with this achievement came a
notable sense of pride and confident belief that European civilization was the
best on earth and that the natives of the lands Europeans controlled would only
benefit from colonial influence. However, not everybody saw colonization as
positive for all those involved. Some of the most notable writers of the time
produced works criticizing the process of colonization. Two of the most
significant works in this area are Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness and
Jonathan Swift’s A Modest Proposal. Although these pieces of literature both
criticize colonization, they have different themes. The theme of A Modest
Proposal could be described as the negative effects of colonization on the
colonized, while the central idea in Heart of Darkness is the negative effects
of colonization on both the colonized and the colonizers.
The differences in
these themes are significant to the strategies used by the authors to explore
the adverse effects of colonization. Swift makes great use of irony and imagery,
to accentuate the plight of the Irish. Conrad comments on the frightening
changes that people involved with colonization can go through by exploring
character development and detailing a narrative of oppression. Swift uses irony
in A Modest Proposal because it allows him to highlight the emotional detachment
felt by the colonizing British towards the Irish. It is this emotional detached
feeling that lead to the atrocities committed against the Irish citizens. The
irony in A Modest Proposal is evident right in the title. There is certainly
nothing modest about the proposal of eating the infants of impoverished Irish
citizens. The irony accentuates how cruel and uncompassionate the powerful
British Imperialists were, towards the destitute Irish population. The reader
must realize that Swift is operating independently of the narrator in a covert
manner (Phiddian 607). He develops the persona of the proposer to say exactly
the opposite of what he feels. While the proposer suggests eating poor Irish
children is particularly proper at merry meetings, particularly weddings and
christenings, this could not be further from the opinion of Swift. Nor does
Swift actually believe that this plan will increase the care and tenderness of
mothers toward their children. (NA 1052) Moreover, the whole topic of
cannibalism, is discussed with tongue in cheek and is meant to suggest that the
British were devouring the Irish. Images of cruelty and evil put, forward by the
narrator, weigh heavily in the theme of A Modest Proposal.
Throughout the
pamphlet, the reader is bombarded with disturbing imagery of Irish people and
their children being treated like livestock raised for consumption. The narrator
refers to the parents of the children as savages (NA 1050) and breeders (NA
1051) and dams (NA 1048). Then he compares the children to roasting pigs (NA
1050) and continues as if he were writing a cook book. He speaks of how
delicious he thinks these infants would be whether stewed, roasted, baked or
boiled (NA 1049) or served in a fricassee or a ragout (NA 1049). He describes
how the carcasses (NA 1050) of these babies could be nicely seasoned with a
little pepper or salt (NA 1050) and will be in season throughout the year (NA
1050). Flaying the carcass and using the skin of these babies to make admirable
gloves for ladies, and summer boots for fine gentlemen (NA 1050) is another
suggestion he puts forward. He expands beyond just slaughtering the infants for
food and leather products by suggesting the possibility of hunting the
adolescents for sport. He dismisses this idea because he imagines the flesh of
the adolescents would be too tough for eating and because hunting them would
reduce the breeding stock. He also has concerns that some scrupulous people
might be apt to censure such a practice (although indeed very unjustly) as a
little bordering on cruelty (NA 1051). All of the gruesome imagery used in A
Modest Proposal has earned it the reputation of being one of Swift’s most potent
attacks in his war on a class of civilized people who often behave like animals
(McMinn 149). Joseph Conrad details a narrative of oppression emphasizing the
horrible treatment of African natives during the colonization of the Congo. The
Europeans claimed that they were trying to civilize the natives, and that each
colonized station should be for humanizing, improving and instructing, (NA 2228)
as if colonization was to the advantage of the natives. In the same voice, it
was said that the natives were brutes (NA 2242) and savages (NA 2218) and that
they should all be exterminated (NA 2242). Heart of Darkness described African
blacks as being criminals (NA 2216) and enemies (NA 2214) and they were treated
as such. The natives were forced to do intense heavy labor for the colonizers.
They dug holes, tunneled through mountains, moved soil from one place to another
in baskets balanced on their heads. When there was no meaningful work needed to
be done, the blacks were forced to do heavy labor just for the sake of doing
heavy labor. They did objectless blasting (NA 2215) and other pointless work in
the whites philanthropic desire of giving the criminals something to do (NA
2216). They were treated like working animals. They were forced to carry 60lb
loads 200 miles in scorching heat with inadequate nourishment. A number of them
died on that trip. In the stations they worked in chain gangs where, each had an
iron collar on his neck, and all were connected with a chain (NA 2215). They
were supervised by other gun wielding natives who had apparently joined the
colonizers in the oppression of their people. When the overworked natives could
work no more they would simply crawl under a tree in the shade and die. If the
blacks stopped working, made a mistake, or were suspected of making a mistake,
they were beaten savagely. Beatings are very common in Heart of Darkness. The
European pilgrims are constantly in the possession of staves, just in case they
should have to discipline a native. A black man was beaten nearly to death as
the result of a dispute over two hens. Then later in the story, a black man was
beaten so badly that after a few days he just wandered off into the forest and
died. It becomes increasingly clear as the plot develops that the colonizing
Europeans treated the land and the people they were colonizing with no respect
at all. Through the presentation of characters and their development through the
story, Conrad examines the negative effects colonization can have on the
colonizers. It makes them lazy; it reveals their weaknesses; it puffs them up
with empty vanity of being white; and it fortifies the intolerable hypocrisy
with which Europeans in general conceal their selfish aims (Watt 37). It causes
them to hate and brings out the evil from within them.
The first white man that
Marlow comes across in the Congo is the companies accountant. His vanity is
evident, from the way he keeps himself impeccably groomed, while other human
beings around him are living squalid, unbearable lives and dying horrifying
deaths. He wore a high starched collar, white cuffs, a light alpaca jacket,
snowy trousers, a clear necktie and varnished boots (NA 2217). Meanwhile,
everything else in the station was a muddle (NA 2217) and there were people
breathing their last breaths just outside his door. The development of his
hatred while in Africa is clear when he tells Marlow that one comes to hate
those savages - hate them to death (NA 2218). His evilness is accentuated by the
flies that buzzed fiendishly (NA 2217) around him, conjuring up images of
Beelzebub, Lord of the Flies. Though his character is a minor one, the
accountant gives the readers their first taste of the Congo’s detrimental
effects on the colonizers. Kurtz and Marlow are sort of mirror images of one
another. Marlow is what Kurtz once was and Kurtz is what Marlow could have been.
Both are affected adversely by their experience in the Congo. The change in
Marlow is very evident by the end of the story. Near the beginning of the story,
he states that he is appalled by lies, that there is a taint of death (NA 2224)
and a flavour of mortality (NA 2224) in them. He says lies are exactly what I
hate and detest in the world - what I want to forget (NA 2224). Then in the end
of the story, he must make a decision whether to tell Kurtz’s wife a truth that
will devastate her or a lie that will put her at ease. He lies to her. It may be
good intentions that caused him to lie, but he lied all the same.
A part of
Marlow died in the Congo and he became what he hates, a liar. Kurtz on the other
hand went into the Congo as a highly respected person for whom superiors had
high hopes and big plans. By the end of the story Kurtz has gone insane. While
Marlow peeped over the edge, (NA 2257) and drew back [his] hesitating foot, (NA
2258) Kurtz had made that last stride, he had stepped over the edge (NA 2258).
Kurtz was so damaged by his Congo colonization experience that it killed him
before he made it back to civilization. It is these changes in the main
characters of the story that are most influential in developing, in the reader,
a sense of how colonization effects the colonizer. Colonization is a part of the
theme in both Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness and Jonathan Swift’s A Modest
Proposal. While Swift’s work deals mainly with the negative effects of
colonization on those being colonized, Conrad’s story explores the negative
experiences of both the colonized and the colonizers. The differences in these
themes are significant to the strategies used by the authors to explore the
negative effects of colonization. As in much of his literary work, Swift uses a
great deal of irony and imagery to drive his point home. Conrad on the other
hand, details a narrative of oppression and delves into character development to
describe his thoughts and experiences with colonization in Africa. These works
can be viewed as criticisms of events of the past, but they should also be
viewed as warnings for the future. People should learn from the past and not
make the same mistakes twice. Unfortunately it seems as if history repeats
itself and human beings make the same error over and over again.
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