![]() ![]() Inner strength could allow a man to push off the temptation to dominate, but civilization actually saps this inner strength by making men think it's unnecessary. Marlow, and Heart of Darkness, argue that in the African jungle-"utter solitude without a policeman"-the civilized man is plunged into a world without superficial restrictions, and the mad desire for power comes to dominate him. Throughout the novella, Marlow argues that what Europeans call "civilization" is superficial, a mask created by fear of the law and public shame that hides a dark heart, just as a beautiful white sepulcher hides the decaying dead inside. ![]() The novella depicts European society as hollow at the core: Marlow describes the white men he meets in Africa, from the General Manager to Kurtz, as empty, and refers to the unnamed European city as the " sepulchral city" (a sepulcher is a hollow tomb). Heart of Darkness portrays a European civilization that is hopelessly and blindly corrupt. ![]()
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