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What Is Northrop Frye's Journey?

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About romance, Northrop Frye argues that “with romance it is much harder to avoid the feeling of convention, that the story is one of the family of similar stories” (60). In his invaluable book The Secular Scripture: A Study of the Structure of Romance, Frye devotes a chapter to deal with a crucial convention in romance that is the journey to the underworld. Frye explains that in the literary imagination there are four levels of the universe, the lowest is “the demonic world of hell, in Christianity not part of the order of nature but an autonomous growth, usually placed below ground. (98)” The underworld as its name implies is believed to be situated in a lower place than the ordinary world. Conrad’s Malay and African works are read by many critics as dramatizations of the theme of descent. …show more content…
In so doing he is able to convey an underworld that is even darker and depressing than the underworld portrayed in myths and the classical literature. Heart of Darkness is one of Conrad’s novels where the theme of descent is explored, and where similarities between Virgil’s Aeneid and Marlow’s journey through the river Congo are identified. Lillian Feder shows that this is done through Conrad’s combination of “the traditional imagery of the epic descent with realistic details from his own experience in the Congo,” which helped create “an image of hell credible to the modern man. (162)” Hence Conrad’s innovation consists in accommodating the classical conception of the theme of the descent to the real setting of

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