Heart of Darkness
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What can Conrad teach writers about the uses of landscape description?
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I'd like to read this. Just went through your 'imagery systems' essay.
cheers
FD

First impression: I like it--perhaps read through it too fast--but I found (reassuringly) that it covers the basics and places the newcomer on good footing to start thinking about environment.
'Setting as character' is a concept I've heard prior to this; and I know one screenwriting tutor who makes it the centerpiece of her theory - Mary Buckham's Writing Active Setting: Characterization and Sensory Detail, and Writing Active Setting: Emotion, Conflict and Backstory.
Are you familiar with her? There's certainly room enough for all sorts of different interpretations of 'setting' in storytelling--I'm seeing it emerge more and more in the genre--curious though if you've read her and how would you say your ideas differ, or perhaps match hers? I can't speak towards her efforts yet; her titles are on my 'to-read' list.
But as to your fine musings, yes--I would agree that Conrad probably found it useful to increase the menace of the jungle as the story proceeded along. Although you identify the setting as a character, you can also go farther and identify it as: the antagonist in the story. If you mentioned this and I missed it, sorry.
However, even if this is recognized; I'm still not sure whether this imbues the jungle environment with an 'arc'. Becoming more menacing..becoming 'vengeful'..its certainly something 'near' an arc. But a true arc? Not so sure. Does the arc of the jungle ever complete? Or is it more of a fragment of an arc?
And isn't it really that all these impressions of the changing jungle are still in Marlowe's perception? Once he departs, what happens?


Conrad's writings all ooze paragraphs about the environment surrounding his characters but he seems to have varying success with this obsessive technique, book-to-book. Sometimes its actually annoying; sometimes he seems like he's trying too hard; sometimes lesser-known works show off his ability better even than what he accomplished in 'HoD'.
Still, he's as good a writer as any to serve as a prompt for beginning authors to remember not to overlook this important part of storytelling. As you know from our earlier conversation, I think writers over-focus on the 'bones' of the story these days' and forget the flesh and the skin.




The main narrative is a story within a story so you have to read this as character development of the main character and character development of place.
I haven't found Conrad's place descriptions compelling, though. They don't feel immediate.

Nice work on the post, Tim. I've not returned to Heart of Darkness in too long a time. May be time to return to the river journey. Would be interesting to see how I react to reading it these many years later.

This is an awesome compendium of human bodily frailties to have as a handy reference:
The Anatomy of Melancholy



I wonder what Conrad thought of Hardy.
Read my answer here: http://weedlit.blogspot.com/2013/04/s...
What do you think?