All 14 Uses of
Heart of Darkness
in
The God of Small Things
- Ayemenem his private Heart of Darkness.†
Chpt 2 *Heart of Darkness = Joseph Conrad's depiction of "the horror" of a human psyche (1899)
- The house on the other side of the rivet Looming in the Heart of Darkness.†
Chpt 2
- Further inland, and still across, a five-star hotel chain had bought the Heart of Darkness.†
Chpt 5
- The old colonial bungalow with its deep verandah and Doric columns, was surrounded by smaller, older, wooden houses—ancestral homes—that the hotel chain had bought from old families and transplanted in the Heart of Darkness.†
Chpt 5
- In Ayemenem they danced to jettison their humiliation in the Heart of Darkness.†
Chpt 12
- On their way back from the Heart of Darkness, they stopped at the temple to ask pardon of their gods.†
Chpt 12
- In the Heart of Darkness they mock him with their lolling nakedness and their imported attention spans.†
Chpt 12
- Perhaps that evening had been a particularly bad one in the Heart of Darkness.†
Chpt 12
- Take everything, her colleagues had advised Margaret Kochamma in concerned voices, you never know, which was their way of saying to a colleague traveling to the Heart of Darkness that: (a) Anything Can Happen To Anyone.†
Chpt 13
- He was walking swiftly now, towards the Heart of Darkness.†
Chpt 15
- The one in which a posse of Touchable Policemen crossed the Meenachal River, sluggish and swollen with recent rain, and picked their way through the wet undergrowth, clumping into the Heart of Darkness.†
Chpt 17
- Dark of Heartness tiptoed into the Heart of Darkness.†
Chpt 18
- Unlike the custom of rampaging religious mobs or conquering armies running riot, that morning in the Heart of Darkness the posse of Touchable Policemen acted with economy, not frenzy.†
Chpt 18
- Margaret Kochamma (because she knew that when you travel to the Heart of Darkness [b] Anything can Happen to Anyone) called her in to have her regimen of pills.†
Chpt 20
Definition:
novella that is arguably the most influential work of the influential author, Joseph Conrad; a depiction of "the horror" of a human psyche (1899)