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26 Hum. Rts. Q. 584 (2004)
At the Heart of Darkness: Crimes against Humanity and the Banality of Evil

handle is hein.journals/hurq26 and id is 594 raw text is: HUMAN RIGHTS QUARTERLY
At the Heart of Darkness:
Crimes Against Humanity and the
Banality of Evil
Birgit Maier-Katkin*
Daniel Maier-Katkin**
ABSTRACT
This article, while rooted in critical literature, is interdisciplinary, drawing
upon political and social theory, history, law, and social sciences to address
the problem of evil in an environment dominated by crimes against
humanity: the Congo during the reign of the Belgian King Leopold. Joseph
Conrad's Heart of Darkness, published in 1899, is based in part on the
author's experiences aboard the steamship Roi des Belges on the Congo
River in 1890. The narrative contains three representations of evil: the
base, primitive, perverse allure of lust and greed in the deepest recesses of
the human psyche; evil at the heart of civilization and modernity; and the
banal complicity of ordinary people whose silence and denial allows evil
to prosper.
Without impugning the quality or importance of Heart of Darkness,
either as literature or as part of the global discourse on human rights, it is
nevertheless argued that the primitive allure of evil is emphasized in the
narrative to the detriment of representations of more subtle and civilized
* Birgit Maier-Katkin is Assistant Professor of German in the Department of Modern
Languages at Florida State University. Her scholarly work is focused on twentieth century
German literature and culture with a particular emphasis on exile writers, human rights
abuses in the Third Reich, and the multigenerational construction of memory of everyday
experience in cultures dominated by crimes against humanity.
** Daniel Maier-Katkin is Professor and Dean of the School of Criminology and Criminal
Justice at Florida State University, where he is also affiliated with the Center for the
Advancement of Human Rights. He is a graduate of Columbia Law School where he was a
founding editor of the Columbia Survey of Human Rights Law, and of the Institute of
Criminology at Cambridge University. His published work focuses on civil liberties and
reform in the administration of justice, but his interests are becoming increasingly focused
on humanities scholarship.
Human Rights Quarterly 26 (2004) 584-604 © 2004 by The Johns Hopkins University Press

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