Early in the imperial colonial period slavery was the chief reason for exploiting
Early in the imperial colonial period slavery was the chief reason for exploiting
Adam Hochschild's "King Leopold's Ghost" is a lost historical account starting in the late 19th century continuing into the 20th century of the enslavement of an entire country. The book tells the story of King Leopold and his selfish attempt to essentially make Belgium bigger starting with the Congo. This was all done under an elaborate "philanthropic" public relations curtain deceiving many countries along with the United States (the first to sign on in Leopold's claim of the Congo). There were many characters in the book ones that aided in the enslavement of the Congo and others that help bring light to the situation but the most important ones I thought were: King Leopold, a cold calculating, selfish leader, as a child he was crazy about geography and as an adult wasn't satisfied with his small kingdom of Belgium setting his sites on the Congo to expand. Hochschild compares Leopold to a director in a play he even says how brilliant he is in orchestrating the capture of the Congo. Another important character is King Leopold's, as Hochschild puts it, "Stagehand" Henry Morton Stanley. He was a surprisingly cruel person killing many natives of the Congo in his sophomore voyage through the interior of Africa (The first was to find Livingston). Leopold used Stanley to discuss treaties with African leaders granting Leopold control over the Congo. Some of the natives he talked to weren't even in the position to sign the treaties or they didn't know what they were signing. And probably the most influential person in the book, E.D. Morel. Morel, an employee of a Belgian company that handled shipments to the Congo, noticed that the shipments coming to and from the Congo seemed really suspicious.…
The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot is about a Southern-Christian African-American woman who has developed a deadly disease, in which she later dies of. What stands out in the book the most is how Mrs. Lacks was treated because of her ethnicity and how Skloot's race played a role in some of the treatment in the book. Reading this, I thought to myself: if Henrietta would have been white in her lifetime, she would have had a better advantage in life. If Skloot would have been African-American she probably would have emphasized racism. If both of their races would have been different, the whole perspective of the book would have changed.…
Sonya Hartnett’s The Ghost’s Child reveals the mystifying story of Matilda’s remarkable journey up the mountain of life. Even though the departure of Feather pained Maddy emotionally, the overall outcome significantly boosted her emotional strength and confidence. Feather loved Maddy so much, but he knew he couldn’t change, so he had to do what was best for Maddy in order for her to be happy. The loss of Feather as well as the Fay encouraged Maddy to embark on many new adventures. At the end of Matilda’s glorious journey of life, she was, truly, happy.…
“A little more than a quarter of a century ago, a great genius for evil, having achieved in rapid succession a series of diplomatic master strokes, stretched out to reach the scepter which was to give him power over life and death of over 20 million human beings.” This great genius for evil, King Leopold II, was commonly known for the atrocities he committed in the Congo Free State. Leopold’s ability to gain control over the lives of the Congolese was due to the deceit and use of persuasion over head powers for a lucrative business. Specifically, in the Congo Free State, King Leopold II’s approach to governing, in an effort to gain the most profit, lead to violent atrocities and the deaths of many natives.…
Government scandal is no shocking news, constant new conspiracies and power plays are all too frequently covered by the media for such a thing to be a surprise. The biggest scandal is covering up their own actions. Too much history is covered up by governments around the world. Selfishly, they hide their own shameful history to keep a good name and to stay in good graces with their subjects. In his final chapter of King Leopold’s Ghost, Adam Hochschild conveys how the transgression of the Flemish to the Congolese was erased. How is it that the people of both the Congo and Belgium have completely forgotten the horrors their predecessors endured and committed? For every secret that is uncovered, how many more are…
King Leopold II of Belgium was a manipulative ruler who created injustices in the Congo Free State. Many missionaries and young idealists traveled to Africa for adventure but unexpectedly found themselves amidst a holocaust. Despite the many African rebel leaders’ attempts to stop King Leopold, over ten million Congolese people were killed.…
What occurred in the Congro, Hochschild writes, is “no worse than what happened in neighboring colonies” (Hochschild 280). The shocking realization that the reader is left with is that King Leopold’s Ghost was not a story about one evil man, but a single instance of the perils of colonialism that were all to common during this time. By allowing the reader to observe and understand the what happened in the Congo at a granular level, Hochschild underscores the importance of the historical context in which these events were occurring…
They we're treated as slaves and their wives were raped and held hostage so their husbands would work and give the much profitable rubber in exchange for their wives’ freedom. Leopold thinks he was taking care of the Africans, when really what he did was rape the country. The rubber trade made Leopold one of the richest men in the world and made Belgium flourish, but the suffering of the Congolese was unseen. The EP forced the native Africans to work for seven years, while allows Leopold to torture them even more.…
In just over two decades, Leopold had begun genocide. Within the time he imperialized Africa he had slaughtered over 10 million Africans by mutilating their limbs and genitals, whipping them to death, starving them into forced labor, holding their kids captive and setting fire to settlements. A FP junior officer described an invasion to punish a village that had protested Leopold’s rule, in the following words. “The commanding officer ordered us to cut off the heads of the men and hang them on the village palisades, also their sexual members, and to hang the women and the children on the palisade in the form of a cross." Between the 1880s and 1903 the populace of the Congo had been reduced from about 20 million to around 8 1/2 million.…
Another example of King Leopold’s hypocrisy is his accepting the recognition for being a humanitarian. It is hard to imagine someone accepting labels like, “humanitarian” (92) or his efforts being called “the greatest humanitarian work of this time,” (46) when people are being tortured, raped, mutilated and murdered under his rule Forcing the local Congolese into slave labor when he himself denounced the Arab slave trade is by no means humanitarian. Or, putting the Congolese in chains and justifying it as teaching them, “the sanctity of work” (118) humanitarian…
The reign of King Leopold II over the Congo began in 1876. He held a Geographical Conference in Brussels and disguised his lust for land and lucrative resources as a humanitarian effort to civilize the African people, which gained his conquest approval from other European leaders. The king then convinced famed African explorer Henry Morton Stanley to lead his mission in the Congo and begin buying land from African leaders, forming a large colony, which he named the Congo Free State. During the late 1800s, King Leopold took control of the Congo and raided it for ivory and rubber. He and his agents in Africa used the Congolese for all of the labor-intense jobs associated with these resources; though he called them volunteers, the natives were essentially slaves, kidnapped, chained, and forced to work with the threat of severe punishment looming over them. Those that did not die by whip or bullet fell to starvation, disease, and exhaustion, and the few that survived lived in terrible conditions. For years, King Leopold II hid this brutality from the rest of the world under a meticulously-crafted façade of humanitarianism. Eventually, however, visitors to his colony noticed the cruelties and wrote of them. A young British shipping agent, Edmund Morel, lead the revolt against Leopold’s Congo, and African-Americans…
Imperialism is the ideology that drives the Europeans in the “Heart of Darkness” towards the Congo for its ivory. In the Congo, the only things worth paying attention towards are those that provide monetary benefits, and this can be seen when Conrad states “Some, I heard, got drowned in the surf; but whether they did or not, nobody seemed particularly to care.…
When a famous missionary and explorer by the name of Dr. David Livingstone vanished in the Congo Basin, he led a mission to find him. After Stanley's successful exploration of central Africa, king of the Belgians, Leopold II, wanted Stanley to carry out expeditions for him. Leopold was looking to establish a domain in Africa, and that is just what he did. Before long, the African territory held by Belgium had become infamous for the ghastly treatment of the native population. In King Leopold's Public Letter, the king writes to missionaries working for him in the Congo.…
Heart of darkness is not only an attack on colonialism, but also a criticism of the dark greed that the human heart retains. Moreover, most of the content of the novel is pervaded by symbolic meanings among which destiny and foreshadowing play a leading role, and such is their relevance that both of them are consistently present explicitly and metaphorically throughout the novel. Therefore, the apparently innocent journey to the Congo to meet Kurtz masks a deeper meaning, a symbolic journey to the bottom of the human heart, a heart thirsty for power and wealth ―the heart of darkness ― which is represented by Kurtz and the colonialist lifestyle that surrounds him. “Kurtz 's methods had ruined the district… They only showed that Mr. Kurtz lacked restraint in the gratification of his various lusts, that there was something wanting in him -- some small matter which, when the pressing need arose, could not be found under his magnificent eloquence”.…
In King Leopold’s Ghost by Adam Hochschild, Adam Hochschild highlights King Leopold’s greed for the the Congo by detailing the earliest history of Africa’s colonies and the key roles that some explorers played during his reign. Hochschild put his novel together to were it’s vivid and is a novelistic narrative that helps the reader get a clear image of the magnitude of horror perpetrated by King Leopold and his minions.…