An Unofficial 'The Rest Is History' Reading List
Joseph Conrad
2 books referenced
Books by Joseph Conrad
Referenced in 12 episodes
February 27, 2025
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Referenced as a thematic comparison to the Aguirre story, discussing how Europeans venture into remote areas and encounter darkness - the hosts note they 'did a podcast on a few weeks ago' about this book
February 20, 2025
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The main subject of the episode - a novella first published in Blackwoods magazine in 1899, discussed extensively as one of the most celebrated works in English literature and a portrait of Belgian Congo colonialism
February 17, 2025
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Referenced as the book the podcast series began with and will return to discuss in a future episode, described as 'one of the most influential works of fiction ever written.'
February 13, 2025
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The novella is quoted extensively at the beginning and throughout the episode. It's described as being written in 1899, nine years after Conrad visited the Congo Free State as a merchant seaman. The hosts use passages from the book to illustrate the horrors of Leopold's Congo.
February 10, 2025
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The episode opens with a reading from this novella and discusses it as the inspiration for Apocalypse Now, describing it as 'probably the greatest, the most influential, possibly the most controversial book' about European colonialism in Africa.
May 12, 2024
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Referenced during a discussion comparing American westward expansion and treatment of Native Americans to British imperial projects. Tom mentions 'Heart of darkness' as a literary parallel for the themes of colonialism, the 'noble savage' concept, and the moral complexities of imperial expansion into territories perceived as 'uncivilized.'
May 15, 2023
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Referenced when discussing the idea of blank spaces on maps and Africa as 'the heart of darkness'
April 27, 2023
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Mentioned as the literary source that Apocalypse Now is based on - described as 'Conrad's story of Belgian imperialism in the Congo' and used to discuss the themes of imperial adventures and moral corruption
October 06, 2022
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Mentioned as a contrast to the simpler imperial adventure stories, noting that Churchill's writing about empire was 'not Heart of Darkness' in terms of moral complexity
July 18, 2022
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Explicitly quoted at the beginning of the episode, with the passage where Marlowe imagines the feelings of a Roman posted to Britain, looking at the Thames estuary as a place of savagery
September 23, 2021
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Described as Joseph Conrad's famous novella, with the character Kurtz being based upon King Leopold II of Belgium and his brutal rule of Congo
July 01, 2021
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Mentioned as the great story about how the coloniser can enter a heart of darkness where all moral norms get dissolved
Referenced in 1 episode
February 20, 2025
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Mentioned as Conrad's first novel, which he started writing in 1889