Reading and Resisting Representations of Black Africans in Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness

Authors

  • Victoria Cowan University of Saskatchewan English Department, College of Arts and Science

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.32396/usurj.v1i1.54

Keywords:

representation, black Africans, Conrad, Joseph, Heart of Darkness, colonialist discourse, resistant reading

Abstract

This article adapts feminist critic Judith Fetterley’s articulation of resistant reading to the colonial context in order to perform a racially ethical reading of Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness. Adapting a feminist practice of resistant reading to the colonial context is possible because of the ways in which the structures of patriarchal and colonialist discourses are homologous. This article approaches Conrad’s text as a piece of colonialist discourse by tracing the ways in the Congolese people are represented as wild, dark, animalistic, and incomplete. Employing this methodology is useful, indeed arguably essential, for reading Conrad’s representations of black Africans in his novella because doing so hinders the perpetuation of a debilitating, dehumanizing discourse “in which the very humanity of black people is called into question” (Achebe 346).

Author Biography

Victoria Cowan, University of Saskatchewan English Department, College of Arts and Science

Victoria Cowan is a fifth year English honours student at the University of Saskatchewan. Hir areas of interest include primarily Indigenous literatures, queer literatures, and various theoretical understandings of literature that include but are not limited to feminist, queer, and postcolonial lenses. Sie advocates strongly for an engaged and empowered post-secondary education and was recently named a 2013 3M National Student Fellow for this vision.

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Published

2014-02-27