Stories For Sale
Stories
De Maupassant, Guy
Click to view details

Folio Society Published Works Number 2841

Conrad, Joseph - Conrad's Congo

We buy and sell items like these, so please contact us if you have similar items for sale, and we will make you an offer if we are interested.

To check if we have this item, or similar items, in stock, please click the Check Stock link below. Alternatively, use the links on the left to search our large online database of items for sale, or to visit the rest of the site.

Check Stock

Conrad, Joseph - Conrad's Congo (Published in by The Folio Society in 2013. Introduced by J. H. Stape. Preface by Adam Hochschild.Bound in cloth.Blocked with a design by Neil Gower. Set in Minion.256 pages. Frontispiece and 16 pages of sepia and black & white plates and some integrated diagrams. Book size: 9" x 6.25". Unique to Folio, this collection explores the genesis of Heart of Darkness. With an introduction by Conrad expert J. H. Stape and contemporary photographs. In 1890, at the age of 33, Joseph Conrad fulfilled his childhood dream of visiting Central Africa when he became captain of a paddle-steamer on the Congo River, under the employ of the Société Anonyme Belge. However, as he would later write, in place of the dream came the realisation that the colonial enterprise was 'the vilest scramble for loot that ever disfigured the history of human conscience and geographical exploration'. The journey was to profoundly affect him, both mentally and physically, for the rest of his life, proving formative in his development as a writer and the creation of Heart of Darkness. Conrad's 'Up-river Book', the ship's log in which he recorded his six-week journey aboard the Roi des Belges, is central to this story, and is framed by his 'Congo Diary', recording the eight months he spent in the Congo Free State. Interspersed with these texts are his letters to family and friends. The short story, 'An Outpost of Progress', which foreshadows Conrad's most ambitious and acclaimed work, and is the only other to draw directly on his experiences in the Congo, is also included. Two European men take charge of a trading station, puffed up with a sense of superiority, but regarded as 'imbeciles' by their superiors and oblivious to the simmering hatred of their conduit slave from Sierra Leone. Two appendices provide additional context. One consists of testimonies on how the journey affected the course of Conrad's life, from writers including Bertrand Russell and Ford Madox Ford. The second is an extract from then British Consul Roger Casement's 1903 Congo Report, which documented the human rights abuses committed by the colonial administration. Conrad expert J. H. Stape, who advised on the compilation of this illuminating collection and provided linking passages, has written a new introduction, which sits alongside a preface by Adam Hochschild adapted from his bestselling history King Leopold's Ghost. Conrad's hand-drawn diagrams from his diary and the original 'Up-river Book' accompany a series of photographs from the archives at the Royal Museum for Central Africa in Tervuren, Belgium, which has an extensive collection of photographs of the Congo from the period that Conrad was there. One is an unusually clear image of the Roi des Belges; others provide disturbing insights into the brutality of the slave trade. The source material that forms this unique collection weaves together a remarkable story about the genius that would produce one of the 20th century's greatest works of fiction. )

[Back to top]

Useful Links

Home Page
Links
Contact Us
Blog

Information

Terms and conditions
Delivery information
About Ardis Books

Policies

Returns policy
Cancellation policy

Contact

Customer services
Email Ardis Books
What our customers say