Achebe, Chinua. "An Image of Africa: Racism in Conrad's 'Heart of
Darkness'" Massachusetts Review. 18. 1977. Rpt. in Heart of Darkness,
An Authoritative Text, background and Sources Criticism. 1961. 3rd
ed. Ed. Robert Kimbrough, London: W. W Norton and Co., 1988,
pp.251-261
In the fall of 1974 I was walking one day from the English
Department at the University of Massachusetts to a parking lot. It
was a fine autumn morning such as encouraged friendliness to
passing strangers. Brisk youngsters were hurrying in all
directions, many of them obviously freshmen in their first flush of
enthusiasm. An older man going the same way as I turned and
remarked to me how very young they came these days. I agreed. Then
he asked me if I was a student too. I said no, I was a teacher.
What did I teach? African literature. Now that was funny, he said,
because he knew a fellow who taught the same thing, or perhaps it
was African history, in a certain Community College not far from
here. It always surprised him, he went on to say, because he never
had thought of Africa as having that kind of stuff, you know. By
this time I was walking much faster. "Oh well," I heard him say
finally, behind me: "I guess I have to take your course to find
out." A few weeks later I received two very touching letters from
high school children in Yonkers, New York, who -- bless their
teacher -- had just read Things Fall Apart . One of them was
particularly happy to learn about the customs and superstitions of
an African tribe.
I propose to draw from these rather trivial encounters rather heavy
conclusions which at first sight might seem somewhat out of
proportion to them. But only, I hope, at first sight.
The young fellow from Yonkers, perhaps partly on account of his age
but I believe also for much deeper and more serious reasons, is
obviously unaware that the life of his own tribesmen in Yonkers,
New York, is full of odd customs and superstitions and, like
everybody else in his culture, imagines that he needs a trip to
Africa to encounter those things.
The other person being fully my own age could not be excused on the
grounds of his years. Ignorance might be a more likely reason; but
here again I believe that something more willful than a mere lack
of information was at work. For did not that erudite British
historian and Regius Professor at Oxford, Hugh Trevor Roper, also
pronounce that African history did not exist?
If there is something in these utterances more than youthful
inexperience, more than a lack of factual knowledge, what is it?
Quite simply it is the desire -- one might indeed say the need -- in
Western psychology to set Africa up as a foil to Europe, as a place
of negations at once remote and vaguely familiar, in comparison
with which Europe's own state of spiritual grace will be manifest.
This need is not new; which should relieve us all of considerable
responsibility and perhaps make us even willing to look at this
phenomenon dispassionately. I have neither the wish nor the
competence to embark on the exercise with the tools of the social
and biological sciences but more simply in the manner of a novelist
responding to one famous book of European fiction: Joseph Conrad's
Heart of Darkness
, which better than any other work that I know displays that
Western desire and need which I have just referred to. Of course
there are whole libraries of books devoted to the same purpose but
most of them are so obvious and so crude that few people worry
about them today. Conrad, on the other hand, is undoubtedly one of
the great stylists of modern fiction and a good storyteller into
the bargain. His contribution therefore falls automatically into a
different class -- permanent literature -- read and taught and
constantly evaluated by serious academics. Heart of Darkness is
indeed so secure today that a leading Conrad scholar has numbered
it "among the half-dozen greatest short novels in the English
language." I will return to this critical opinion in due course
because it may seriously modify my earlier suppositions about who
may or may not be guilty in some of the matters I will now raise.
Heart of Darkness
projects the image of Africa as "the other world," the antithesis
of Europe and therefore of civilization, a place where man's vaunted
intelligence and refinement are finally mocked by triumphant
beastiality. The book opens on the River Thames, tranquil, resting,
peacefully "at the decline of day after ages of good service done
to the race that peopled its banks." But the actual story will take
place on the River Congo, the very antithesis of the Thames. The
River Congo is quite decidedly not a River Emeritus. It has
rendered no service and enjoys no old-age pension. We are told that
"Going up that river was like traveling back to the earliest
beginnings of the world."
Is Conrad saying then that these two rivers are very different, one
good, the other bad? Yes, but that is not the real point. It is not
the differentness that worries Conrad but the lurking hint of
kinship, of common ancestry. For the Thames too "has been one of
the dark places of the earth." It conquered its darkness, of
course, and is now in daylight and at peace. But if it were to
visit its primordial relative, the Congo, it would run the terrible
risk of hearing grotesque echoes of its own forgotten darkness, and
falling victim to an avenging recrudescence of the mindless frenzy
of the first beginnings.
These suggestive echoes comprise Conrad's famed evocation of the
African atmosphere in Heart of Darkness
. In the final consideration his method amounts to no more than a
steady, ponderous, fake-ritualistic repetition of two antithetical
sentences, one about silence and the other about frenzy. We can
inspect samples of this on pages 36 and 37 of the present edition:
a) it was the stillness of an implacable force brooding over an
inscrutable intention and b) The steamer toiled along slowly on the
edge of a black and incomprehensible frenzy. Of course there is a
judicious change of adjective from time to time, so that instead of
inscrutable, for example, you might have unspeakable, even plain
mysterious, etc., etc.
The eagle-eyed English critic F. R. Leavis drew attention long ago
to Conrad's "adjectival insistence upon inexpressible and
incomprehensible mystery." That insistence must not be dismissed
lightly, as many Conrad critics have tended to do, as a mere
stylistic flaw; for it raises serious questions of artistic good
faith. When a writer while pretending to record scenes, incidents
and their impact is in reality engaged in inducing hypnotic stupor
in his readers through a bombardment of emotive words and other
forms of trickery much more has to be at stake than stylistic
felicity. Generally normal readers are well armed to detect and
resist such under-hand activity. But Conrad chose his subject
well -- one which was guaranteed not to put him in conflict with the
psychological predisposition of his readers or raise the need for
him to contend with their resistance. He chose the role of purveyor
of comforting myths.
The most interesting and revealing passages in Heart of Darkness
are, however, about people. I must crave the indulgence of my
reader to quote almost a whole page from about the middle of the
stop/when representatives of Europe in a steamer going down the
Congo encounter the denizens of Africa.
We were wanderers on a prehistoric earth, on an earth that wore the
aspect of an unknown planet. We could have fancied ourselves the
first of men taking possession of an accursed inheritance, to be
subdued at the cost of profound anguish and of excessive toil. But
suddenly as we struggled round a bend there would be a glimpse of
rush walls, of peaked grass-roofs, a burst of yells, a whirl of
black limbs, a mass of hands clapping, of feet stamping, of bodies
swaying, of eyes rolling under the droop of heavy and motionless
foliage. The steamer toiled along slowly on the edge of a black and
incomprehensible frenzy. The prehistoric man was cursing us,
praying to us, welcoming us -- who could tell? We were cut off from
the comprehension of our surroundings; we glided past like
phantoms, wondering and secretly appalled, as sane men would be
before an enthusiastic outbreak in a madhouse. We could not
understand because we were too far and could not remember, because
we were traveling in the night of first ages, of those ages that
are gone, leaving hardly a sign -- and no memories.
The earth seemed unearthly. We are accustomed to look upon the
shackled form of a conquered monster, but there -- there you could
look at a thing monstrous and free. It was unearthly and the men
were .... No they were not inhuman. Well, you know that was the
worst of it -- this suspicion of their not being inhuman. It would
come slowly to one. They howled and leaped and spun and made horrid
faces, but what thrilled you, was just the thought of their
humanity -- like yours -- the thought of your remote kinship with this
wild and passionate uproar. Ugly. Yes, it was ugly enough, but if
you were man enough you would admit to yourself that there was in
you just the faintest trace of a response to the terrible frankness
of that noise, a dim suspicion of there being a meaning in it which
you -- you so remote from the night of first ages -- could comprehend.
Herein lies the meaning of Heart of Darkness and the fascination it
holds over the Western mind: "What thrilled you was just the
thought of their humanity -- like yours .... Ugly."
Having shown us Africa in the mass, Conrad then zeros in, half a
page later, on a specific example, giving us one of his rare
descriptions of an African who is not just limbs or rolling eyes:
And between whiles I had to look after the savage who was fireman.
He was an improved specimen; he could fire up a vertical boiler. He
was there below me and, upon my word, to look at him was as
edifying as seeing a dog in a parody of breeches and a feather hat
walking on his hind legs. A few months of training had done for
that really fine chap. He squinted at the steam-gauge and at the
water-gauge with an evident effort of intrepidity -- and he had filed
his teeth too, the poor devil, and the wool of his pate shaved into
queer patterns, and three ornamental scars on each of his cheeks.
He ought to have been clapping his hands and stamping his feet on
the bank, instead of which he was hard at work, a thrall to strange
witchcraft, full of improving knowledge.
As everybody knows, Conrad is a romantic on the side. He might not
exactly admire savages clapping their hands and stamping their feet
but they have at least the merit of being in their place, unlike
this dog in a parody of breeches. For Conrad things being in their
place is of the utmost importance.
"Fine fellows -- cannibals --in their place," he tells us pointedly.
Tragedy begins when things leave their accustomed place, like
Europe leaving its safe stronghold between the policeman and the
baker to like a peep into the heart of darkness.
Before the story likes us into the Congo basin proper we are given
this nice little vignette as an example of things in their place:
Now and then a boat from the shore gave one a momentary contact
with reality. It was paddled by black fellows. You could see from
afar the white of their eyeballs glistening. They shouted, sang;
their bodies streamed with perspiration; they had faces like
grotesque masks -- these chaps; but they had bone, muscle, a wild
vitality, an intense energy of movement that was as natural and hue
as the surf along their coast. They wanted no excuse for being
there. They were a great comfort to look at.
Towards the end of the story Conrad lavishes a whole page quite
unexpectedly on an African woman who has obviously been some kind
of mistress to Mr. Kurtz and now presides (if I may be permitted a
little liberty) like a formidable mystery over the inexorable
imminence of his departure:
She was savage and superb, wild-eyed and magnificent ....She stood
looking at us without a stir and like the wilderness itself, with
an air of brooding over an inscrutable purpose.
This Amazon is drawn in considerable detail, albeit of a
predictable nature, for two reasons. First, she is in her place and
so can win Conrad's special brand of approval and second, she
fulfills a structural requirement of the story: a savage
counterpart to the refined, European woman who will step forth to
end the story:
She came forward all in black with a pale head, floating toward me
in the dusk. She was in mourning .... She took both my hands in
hers and murmured, "I had heard you were coming."... She had a
mature capacity for fidelity, for belief, for suffering.
The difference in the attitude of the novelist to these two women
is conveyed in too many direct and subfile ways to need elaboration.
But perhaps the most significant difference is the one implied in
the author's bestowal of human expression to the one and the
withholding of it from the other. It is clearly not part of
Conrad's purpose to confer language on the "rudimentary souls" of
Africa. In place of speech they made "a violent babble of uncouth
sounds." They "exchanged short grunting phrases" even among
themselves. But most of the time they were too busy with their
frenzy. There are two occasions in the book, however, when Conrad
departs somewhat from his practice and confers speech, even English
speech, on the savages. The first occurs when cannibalism gets the
better of them:
"Catch 'im," he snapped with a bloodshot widening of his eyes and a
flash of sharp teeth -- "catch 'im. Give 'im to us." "To you, eh?" I
asked; "what would you do with them? "Eat 'im!" he said curtly. . .
.
The other occasion was the famous announcement:"Mistah Kurtz -- he
dead."
At first sight these instances might be mistaken for unexpected
acts of generosity from Conrad. In reality they constitute some of
his best assaults. In the case of the cannibals the
incomprehensible grunts that had thus far served them for speech
suddenly proved inadequate for Conrad's purpose of letting the
European glimpse the unspeakable craving in their hearts. Weighing
the necessity for consistency in the portrayal of the dumb brutes
against the sensational advantages of securing their conviction by
clear, unambiguous evidence issuing out of their own mouth Conrad
chose the latter. As for the announcement of Mr. Kurtz's death by
the "insolent black head in the doorway" what better or more
appropriate finis could be written to the horror story of that
wayward child of civilization who willfully had given his soul to
the powers of darkness and "taken a high seat amongst the devils of
the land" than the proclamation of his physical death by the forces
he had joined?
It might be contended, of course, that the attitude to the African
in Heart of Darkness
is not Conrad's but that of his fictional narrator, Marlow, and
that far from endorsing it Conrad might indeed be holding it up to
irony and criticism. Certainly Conrad appears to go to considerable
pains to set up layers of insulation between himself and the moral
universe of his history. He has, for example, a narrator behind a
narrator. The primary narrator is Marlow but his account is given
to us through the filter of a second, shadowy person. But if
Conrad's intention is to draw a cordon sanitaire between himself
and the moral and psychological malaise of his narrator his care
seems to me totally wasted because he neglects to hint however
subtly or tentatively at an alternative frame of reference by which
we may judge the actions and opinions of his characters. It would
not have been beyond Conrad's power to make that provision if he
had thought it necessary. Marlow seems to me to enjoy Conrad's
complete confidence -- a feeling reinforced by the close similarities
between their two careers.
Marlow comes through to us not only as a witness of truth, but one
holding those advanced and humane views appropriate to the English
liberal tradition which required all Englishmen of decency to be
deeply shocked by atrocities in Bulgaria or the Congo of King
Leopold of the Belgians or wherever.
Thus Marlow is able to toss out such bleeding-heart sentiments as
these:
They were dying slowly -- it was very clear. They were not enemies,
they were not criminals, they were nothing earthly now, nothing but
black shadows of disease and starvation lying confusedly in the
greenish gloom. Brought from all the recesses of the coast in all
the legality of time contracts, lost in uncongenial surroundings,
fed on unfamiliar food, they sickened, became inefficient, and were
then allowed to crawl away and rest.
The kind of liberalism espoused here by Marlow/Conrad touched all
the best minds of the age in England, Europe and America. It took
different forms in the minds of different people but almost always
managed to sidestep the ultimate question of equality between white
people and black people. That extraordinary missionary, Albert
Schweitzer, who sacrificed brilliant careers in music and theology
in Europe for a life of service to Africans in much the same area
as Conrad writes about, epitomizes the ambivalence. In a comment
which has often been quoted Schweitzer says: "The African is indeed
my brother but my junior brother." And so he proceeded to build a
hospital appropriate to the needs of junior brothers with standards
of hygiene reminiscent of medical practice in the days before the
germ theory of disease came into being. Naturally he became a
sensation in Europe and America. Pilgrims flocked, and I believe
still flock even after he has passed on, to witness the prodigious
miracle in Lamberene, on the edge of the primeval forest.
Conrad's liberalism would not take him quite as far as
Schweitzer's, though. He would not use the word brother however
qualified; the farthest he would go was kinship. When Marlow's
African helmsman falls down with a spear in his heart he gives his
white master one final disquieting look.
And the intimate profundity of that look he gave me when he
received his hurt remains to this day in my memory -- like a claim of
distant kinship affirmed in a supreme moment.
It is important to note that Conrad, careful as ever with his
words, is concerned not so much about distant kinship as about
someone laying a claim on it. The black man lays a claim on the
white man which is well-nigh intolerable. It is the laying of this
claim which frightens and at the same time fascinates Conrad, "...
the thought of their humanity -- like yours .... Ugly."
The point of my observations should be quite clear by now, namely
that Joseph Conrad was a thoroughgoing racist. That this simple
truth is glossed over in criticisms of his work is due to the fact
that white racism against Africa is such a normal way of thinking
that its manifestations go completely unremarked. Students of Heart
of Darkness
will often tell you that Conrad is concerned not so much with
Africa as with the deterioration of one European mind caused by
solitude and sickness. They will point out to you that Conrad is,
if anything, less charitable to the Europeans in the story than he
is to the natives, that the point of the story is to ridicule
Europe's civilizing mission in Africa. A Conrad student informed me
in Scotland that Africa is merely a setting for the disintegration
of the mind of Mr. Kurtz.
Which is partly the point. Africa as setting and backdrop which
eliminates the African as human factor. Africa as a metaphysical
battlefield devoid of all recognizable humanity, into which the
wandering European enters at his peril. Can nobody see the
preposterous and perverse arrogance in thus reducing Africa to the
role of props for the break-up of one petty European mind? But that
is not even the point. The real question is the dehumanization of
Africa and Africans which this age-long attitude has fostered and
continues to foster in the world. And the question is whether a
novel which celebrates this dehumanization, which depersonalizes a
portion of the human race, can be called a great work of art. My
answer is: No, it cannot. I do not doubt Conrad's great talents.
Even Heart of Darkness
has its memorably good passages and moments:
The reaches opened before us and closed behind, as if the forest
had stepped leisurely across tile water to bar the way for our
return.
Its exploration of the minds of the European characters is often
penetrating and full of insight. But all that has been more than
fully discussed in the last fifty years. His obvious racism has,
however, not been addressed. And it is high time it was!
Conrad was born in 1857, the very year in which the first Anglican
missionaries were arriving among my own people in Nigeria. It was
certainly not his fault that he lived his life at a time when the
reputation of the black man was at a particularly low level. But
even after due allowances have been made for all the influences of
contemporary prejudice on his sensibility there remains still in
Conrad's attitude a residue of antipathy to black people which his
peculiar psychology alone can explain. His own account of his first
encounter with a black man is very revealing:
A certain enormous buck nigger encountered in Haiti fixed my
conception of blind, furious, unreasoning rage, as manifested in the
human animal to the end of my days. Of the nigger I used to dream
for years afterwards.
Certainly Conrad had a problem with niggers. His inordinate love of
that word itself should be of interest to psychoanalysts. Sometimes
his fixation on blackness is equally interesting as when he gives
us this brief description:
A black figure stood up, strode on long black legs, waving long
black arms. . . .
as though we might expect a black figure striding along on black
legs to wave white arms! But so unrelenting is Conrad's obsession.
As a matter of interest Conrad gives us in A Personal Record what
amounts to a companion piece to the buck nigger of Haiti. At the
age of sixteen Conrad encountered his first Englishman in Europe.
He calls him "my unforgettable Englishman" and describes him in the
following manner:
"(his) calves exposed to the public gaze . . . dazzled the beholder
by the splendor of their marble-like condition and their rich tone
of young ivory. . . . The light of a headlong, exalted satisfaction
with the world of men. . . illumined his face. . . and triumphant
eyes. In passing he cast a glance of kindly curiosity and a
friendly gleam of big, sound, shiny teeth. . . his white calves
twinkled sturdily."
Irrational love and irrational hate jostling together in the heart
of that talented, tormented man. But whereas irrational love may at
worst engender foolish acts of indiscretion, irrational hate can
endanger the life of the community. Naturally Conrad is a dream for
psychoanalytic critics. Perhaps the most detailed study of him in
this direction is by Bernard C. Meyer, M.D. In his lengthy book Dr.
Meyer follows every conceivable lead (and sometimes inconceivable
ones) to explain Conrad. As an example he gives us long
disquisitions on the significance of hair and hair-cutting in
Conrad. And yet not even one word is spared for his attitude to
black people. Not even the discussion of Conrad's antisemitism was
enough to spark off in Dr. Meyer's mind those other dark and
explosive thoughts. Which only leads one to surmise that Western
psychoanalysts must regard the kind of racism displayed by Conrad
absolutely normal despite the profoundly important work done by
Frantz Fanon in the psychiatric hospitals of French Algeria.
Whatever Conrad's problems were, you might say he is now safely
dead. Quite true. Unfortunately his heart of darkness plagues us
still. Which is why an offensive and deplorable book can be
described by a serious scholar as "among the half dozen greatest
short novels in the English language." And why it is today the most
commonly prescribed novel in twentieth-century literature courses
in English Departments of American universities.
There are two probable grounds on which what I have aid so far may
be contested. The first is that it is no concern of fiction to
please people about whom it is written. I will go along with that.
But I am not talking about pleasing people. I am talking about a
book which parades in the most vulgar fashion prejudices and
insults from which a section of mankind has suffered untold agonies
and atrocities in the past and continues to do so in many ways and
many places today. I am talking about a story in which the very
humanity of black people is called in question.
Secondly, I may be challenged on the grounds of actuality. Conrad,
after all, did sail down the Congo in 1890 when my own father was
still a babe in arms. How could I stand up more than fifty years
after his death and purport to contradict him? My answer is that as
a sensible man I will not accept just any traveler's tales solely
on the grounds that I have not made the journey myself. I will not
trust the evidence even off man's very eyes when I suspect them to
be as jaundiced as Conrad's. And we also happen to know that Conrad
was, in the words of his biographer, Bernard C. Meyer, "notoriously
inaccurate in the rendering of his own history."
But more important by far is the abundant testimony about Conrad's
savages which we could gather if we were so inclined from other
sources and which might lead us to think that these people must
have had other occupations besides merging into the evil forest or
materializing out of it simply to plague Marlow and his dispirited
band. For as it happened, soon after Conrad had written his book an
event of far greater consequence was taking place in the art world
of Europe. This is how Frank Willett, a British art historian,
describes it:
Gaugin had gone to Tahiti, the most extravagant individual act of
turning to a non-European culture in the decades immediately before
and after 1900, when European artists were avid for new artistic
experiences, but it was only about 1904-5 that African art began to
make its distinctive impact. One piece is still identifiable; it is
a mask that had been given to Maurice Vlaminck in 1905. He
records that Derain was 'speechless' and 'stunned' when he saw
it,
bought it from Vlaminck and in turn showed it to Picasso and
Matisse, who were also greatly affected by it. Ambroise Vollard
then borrowed it and had it cast in bronze. . . The revolution of
twentieth century art was under way!
The mask in question was made by other savages living just north of
Conrad's River Congo. They have a name too: the Fang people, and
are without a doubt among the world's greatest masters of the
sculptured form. The event Frank Willett is referring to marks the
beginning of cubism and the infusion of new life into European art,
which had run completely out of strength.
The point of all this is to suggest that Conrad's picture of the
people of the Congo seems grossly inadequate even at the height of
their subjection to the ravages of King Leopold's lnternational
Association for the Civilization of Central Africa.
Travelers with closed minds can tell us little except about
themselves. But even those not blinkered, like Conrad with
xenophobia, can be astonishing blind. Let me digress a little here.
One of the greatest and most intrepid travelers of all time, Marco
Polo, journeyed to the Far East from the Mediterranean in the
thirteenth century and spent twenty years in the court of Kublai
Khan in China. On his return to Venice he set down in his book
entitled Description of the World
his impressions of the peoples and places and customs he had seen.
But there were at least two extraordinary omissions in his account.
He said nothing about the art of printing, unknown as yet in Europe
but in full flower in China. He either did not notice it at all or
if he did, failed to see what use Europe could possibly have for
it. Whatever the reason, Europe had to wait another hundred years
for Gutenberg. But even more spectacular was Marco Polo's omission
of any reference to the Great Wall of China nearly 4,000 miles long
and already more than 1,000 years old at the time of his visit.
Again, he may not have seen it; but the Great Wall of China is the
only structure built by man which is visible from the moon! Indeed
travelers can be blind.
As I said earlier Conrad did not originate the image of Africa
which we find in his book. It was and is the dominant image of
Africa in the Western imagination and Conrad merely brought the
peculiar gifts of his own mind to bear on it. For reasons which can
certainly use close psychological inquiry the West seems to suffer
deep anxieties about the precariousness of its civilization and to
have a need for constant reassurance by comparison with Africa. If
Europe, advancing in civilization, could cast a backward glance
periodically at Africa trapped in primordial barbarity it could say
with faith and feeling: There go I but for the grace of God. Africa
is to Europe as the picture is to Dorian Gray -- a carrier onto whom
the master unloads his physical and moral deformities
so that he may go forward, erect and immaculate. Consequently
Africa is something to be avoided just as the picture has to be
hidden away to safeguard the man's jeopardous integrity. Keep away
from Africa, or else! Mr. Kurtz of Heart of Darkness should have
heeded that warning and the prowling horror in his heart would have
kept its place, chained to its lair. But he foolishly exposed
himself to the wild irresistible allure of the jungle and lo! the
darkness found him out.
In my original conception of this essay I had thought to conclude
it nicely on an appropriately positive note in which I would
suggest from my privileged position in African and Western cultures
some advantages the West might derive from Africa once it rid its
mind of old prejudices and began to look at Africa not through a
haze of distortions and cheap mystifications but quite simply as a
continent of people -- not angels, but not rudimentary souls
either -- just people, often highly gifted people and often
strikingly successful in their enterprise with life and society.
But as I thought more about the stereotype image, about its grip
and pervasiveness, about the willful tenacity with which the West
holds it to its heart; when I thought of the West's television and
cinema and newspapers, about books read in its schools and out of
school, of churches preaching to empty pews about the need to send
help to the heathen in Africa, I realized that no easy optimism was
possible. And there was, in any case, something totally wrong in
offering bribes to the West in return for its good opinion of
Africa. Ultimately the abandonment of unwholesome thoughts must be
its own and only reward. Although I have used the word willful
a few times here to characterize the West's view of Africa, it may
well be that what is happening at this stage is more akin to reflex
action than calculated malice. Which does not make the situation
more but less hopeful.
The Christian Science Monitor,
a paper more enlightened than most, once carried an interesting
article written by its Education Editor on the serious
psychological and learning problems faced by little children who
speak one language at home and then go to school where something
else is spoken. It was a wide-ranging article taking in
Spanish-speaking children in America, the children of migrant
Italian workers in Germany, the quadrilingual phenomenon in
Malaysia, and so on. And all this while the article speaks
unequivocally about language. But then out of the blue sky comes
this:
In London there is an enormous immigration of children who speak
Indian or Nigerian dialects, or some other native language.
I believe that the introduction of dialects which is technically
erroneous in the context is almost a reflex action caused by an
instinctive desire of the writer to downgrade the discussion to the
level of Africa and India. And this is quite comparable to Conrad's
withholding of language from his rudimentary souls. Language is too
grand for these chaps; let's give them dialects!
In all this business a lot of violence is inevitably done not only
to the image of despised peoples but even to words, the very tools
of possible redress. Look at the phrase native language
in the Science Monitor excerpt. Surely the only native language
possible in London is Cockney English. But our writer means
something else -- something appropriate to the sounds Indians and
Africans make!
Although the work of redressing which needs to be done may appear
too daunting, I believe it is not one day too soon to begin. Conrad
saw and condemned the evil of imperial exploitation but was
strangely unaware of the racism on which it sharpened its iron
tooth. But the victims of racist slander who for centuries have had
to live with the inhumanity it makes them heir to have always known
better than any casual visitor even when he comes loaded with the
gifts of a Conrad.