Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

“To Boldly Go”: Conrad’s Heart of Darkness and popular culture.

Dryden, Linda

Authors



Abstract

Conrad's Heart of Darkness (1899) is a text that has consistently resisted analytic closure. That is to say that its relevance to the twentieth century (and now the twenty-first century) is apparent through the allusions to the story in our media and culture. As each new "horror" of the postmodern world emerges, Heart of Darkness acquires new meanings that extend its relevance beyond the imperial boundaries of the Belgian Congo of the 1880s and '90s, and bring to Conrad's vision a shockingly contemporary pertinence. Francis Ford Coppola realized the adaptability of what Conrad was trying to convey when he filmed Apocalypse Now in the 1970s: innumerable media references to Heart of Darkness have ensued, some inspired by Coppola's film, but many also inspired by renewed interest in Conrad's text. In this discussion I will draw attention to the variety of ways that Heart of Darkness has been used in our popular culture, and suggest that there is a broader interdependence between popular culture and some of our most valued literary products. I will argue that literature, and Conrad's novella in particular, have a large role to play in the postmodern erasure of the divide between "high culture" and "low culture."

Citation

Dryden, L. (2002). “To Boldly Go”: Conrad’s Heart of Darkness and popular culture. Conradiana, 34, 70-149

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Sep 22, 2002
Deposit Date Mar 31, 2008
Print ISSN 0010-6356
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 34
Pages 70-149
Keywords Joseph Conrad; Heart of Darkness; postmodern; "high" culture; "Low" culture; popular culture; Apocalypse now; cultural allusion; Francis Ford Coppola; interdependence;
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/id/eprint/2276