Tuesday, April 16, 2013

An impression on "Imperialism, Impressionism, and The Politics of Style" by Patrick Brantlinger


Brantlinger’s Criticism is admittedly quite abstruse; however, what I can understand I will attempt to render here.

I) The book’s impressionistic style is able to unite Conrad’s anti-imperialistic style and racist, imperialist voice into “an apparently harmonious whole.”

II) Through an analysis of Marlow’s late admiration of the monstrous Kurtz and gothic adventure-romance motifs, one can understand that Conrad is not criticizing modern imperialism for its brutality, but rather for its apparent betrayal of that which was once a “true, grand, noble, albeit violent enterprise.”

i.e. Modern Imperialism is now a “gigantic and atrocious fraud”


III) The book is also critical of its own failure to meet its own expectations of high morality.