Tuesday, April 28, 2020
Infinity Mirror Essays - Fiction, Literature, Congo Free State
  Infinity Mirror    Annonymous    Joseph Conrad?s novel Heart of Darkness is about a seaman named    Charlie Marlow and an experience he had as a younger man. Early in  the novel it becomes apparent that there is a great deal of tension  in Marlow?s mind about whether he should profit from the immoral  actions of the company he works for which is involved in the ivory  trade in Africa. Marlow believes that the company is ignorant of the  tension between moral enlightenment and capitalism . The  dehumanization of its laborers which is so early apparent to Marlow  seems to be unknown to other members of the Company?s management.    In this story Marlow?s aunt represents capitalism. Her efforts to get  him a job are significant because of the morally compromising nature  of the work of which she seems totally ignorant. When Marlow expresses  doubts about the nature of the work, she replies, ?You forget, dear    Charlie, that the labourer is worthy of his hire? (12). It is clear  that Marlow has mixed feelings about the whole idea. At one point,  trying to justify his actions to himself, he says, ?You understand it  was a continental concern, that Trading Society; but I have a lot of  relations on the living continent, because it?s cheap and not so nasty  as it looks they say? (12). Marlow finally takes the job, however,  and tells himself that the pain and unusually harsh treatment the  workers are subjected to is minimal.    During the tests and the requirements that he has to undergo before  entering the jungle Marlow feels that he is being treated like a  freak. The doctor measures his head and asks him questions such as,  ?Ever any madness in your family (15). In this part of the story    Marlow is made to feel small and unimportant. Any feelings or  concerns that he has are not important to the company, and as a  result, he feels alone. It is only logical that Marlow would have been  second guessing his decision and feeling some kinship with the other  (black) workers who are exploited, but he does not reveal any such  understanding.    Upon reaching his destination in Africa, Marlow finds that things are  just the same. At the point when he is denied rest after traveling  twenty miles on foot he sees things are not going to change. Marlow  then tells of how disease and death are running wild through out the  area, and the company does nothing in the way of prevention other than  to promote those who stay alive. Marlow?s theory on why the manager  was in that position was that ?...he was never ill? (25). This is a  bad situation for Marlow because he sees his boss as a simple man with  little else to offer the company other than to be a mindless foreman  over the operation. This is an example of the company stripping self  worth from its workers in the sense that it does not encourage or  expect input from them. This is all significant because Marlow finds  himself in a position where he is giving up a big piece of himself and  his beliefs to make money.    The tension between capitalism and moral enlightenment in the first  twenty pages of this story is evident. Conrad uses Marlow to depict a  seemingly good-hearted person caught in the middle of the common  dilemma of moral ethics and desire for monetary success. Marlow knows  that there is a great deal of repugnance in what he is doing, yet he  finds himself forced to deal with it in his own personal way, which is  justify it or ignore it. It is clear that the company also is forced  to deal with this same issue, but it does it simply by pretending that  it is not dehumanizing its entire work force. This blindness allows  the Company to profit and prosper, but only at the expense of the  lives of the workers in the jungle who have no way to protest or  escape and the ?white collar? workers like Marlow who have to live  with their hypocrisy.    
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