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Paper 210A: Research Project Writing: Dissertation Writing

Paper 210A: Research Project Writing: Dissertation Writing  

Voices at the Margins: Subalternity and Dehumanization in ‘Frankenstein’ and ‘Heart of Darkness’


Maharaja Krishnakumarsinhji Bhavnagar University Bhavnagar

Paper Code: 22417- Dissertation Writing

Dissertation Title:

Voices at the Margins: Subalternity and Dehumanization in ‘Frankenstein’ and ‘Heart of Darkness’

Submitted by                                                                                                  Supervised by   

Jay Vaghani                                                                                        Prof. (Dr.) Dilip Barad

 Cosupervised by

 Ms. Megha Trivedi

Department of English, MKBU

Roll No: 06(Sem 4)

PG Registration Number: 5108240035

ABC ID: 455132264617

Year: 2026

Presented as partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of M.A. in English.

Submitted to

Department of English, Maharaja Krishnakumarsinhji Bhavnagar University   

Chapter 1:Introduction 9

1.1. Rationale of the Research 9

1.2.1 Subalternity: Conceptual Foundations 11

1.2.2 Dehumanisation: Ideological and Discursive Dimensions 12

1.2.3 Subalternity and Dehumanization as Interconnected Processes 14

1.2.4 Cultural Hegemony and Ideological Institutions 14

1.2.5 Posthumanism and the Question of the Human 15

1.2.6 Literary Representation and Narrative Structure 15

1.2.7 Synthesis of Theoretical Framework 16

1.3. Introduction of the Texts 17

1.3.1. ‘Frankenstein’ (1818) 17

1.3.2. ‘Heart of Darkness’ (1899) 19

1.3.3.Comparative Significance 22

1.4.Statement of the Research Problem 22

1.5. Research Objectives 23

1.6. Research Hypothesis 23

1.7. Research Questions 24

1.8. Research Methods (Tools, Techniques and Approaches) 24

1.8.1. Approach 24

1.8.2. Tools 25

1.8.3. Techniques 26

1.9. Structure of the Dissertation 27

Chapter 2 : Literature Review 32

Chapter 3 : Subalternity, Voice, and Dehumanization in ‘Frankenstein’ 43

Introduction 43

3.1 Subalternity and Dehumanization in ‘Frankenstein’ 45

3.1.1 Theory of Subalternity 45

3.1.2 Theory of Dehumanisation 45

3.2 Theoretical Framework in Relation to the Text 46

3.3 Dehumanised Subaltern Subjects: The Creature and Justine Moritz in ‘Frankenstein’ 47

3.3.1.1 Social Exclusion and Loss of Agency 47

3.3.1.2 Language, Learning, and the Struggle for Self-Representation 48

3.3.2 Gendered and Judicial Subalternity: The Case of Justine Moritz 50

3.3.2.1 Silenced Female Subalternity 50

3.3.2.2 Coerced Confession and Institutional Oppression 51

3.4 Narrative Mediation and the Limits of Voice
3.4.1 Victor Frankenstein as the Controlling Narrator 51

3.4.2 The Creature’s Embedded Narrative and Its Constraints 52

3.5 Processes of Dehumanization in the Novel 53

3.5.1 Monstrosity, Animalisation, and Racialised Description 54

3.5.2 Social Rejection, Violence, and Structural Othering 55

3.6 Ethical Implications of Silencing the Other 56

3.6.1 The Creator’s Moral Responsibility 56

3.6.2 Ethical Failure and the Consequences of Denying Voice 56

Conclusion 57

Introduction 61

4.1 Subalternity, Narrative Silence, and Dehumanization in ‘Heart of Darkness’ 63

4.1.1 Theory of Subalternity in a Colonial Context 64

4.1.2 Theory of Dehumanization in Imperial Ideology 65

4.2 Theoretical Framework in Relation to the Text 66

4.3 Narrative Mediation and the Structure of Silence 66

4.3.1 Marlow as the Controlling Mediator 67

4.3.2 Frame Narrative and Hierarchies of Authority 68

4.3.3 Fragmented and Unintelligible African Speech 68

4.4 Processes of Dehumanization in Colonial Representation 69

4.4.1 Imagery of Darkness, Savagery, and Primitiveness 69

4.4.2 The Body as Labouring Object 70

4.4.3 Kurtz and the Extremity of Imperial Power 70

4.5 African Natives as Colonial Subaltern Subjects 70

4.5.1 Erasure of Individual Identity 70

4.5.2 The African Woman and Gendered Subalternity 71

4.5.3 Resistance and Its Narrative Containment 72

4.6 Ethical Ambiguity and the Limits of European Humanism 72

4.6.1 Critique or Complicity? 72

4.6.2 The Moral Consequences of Denying Humanity 73

4.7 Ethical Implications of Colonial Silencing 73

4.7.1 Imperial Responsibility and Moral Evasion 73

4.7.2 Structural Silence and the Production of Darkness 74

Conclusion 74

Introduction 78

5.2 Revisiting the Hypothesis 84

5.3 Research Findings in Relation to Research Questions 85

5.4 Findings in Relation to Research Objectives 86

5.5 Limitations of the Study 88

5.5.1 Textual Limitations 88

5.5.2 Theoretical Limitations 89

5.6 Suggestions for Further Research 89

5.6.1 Textual Scope for Further Research 89

5.6.2 Theoretical Scope for Further Research 90

Primary sources 92

Conrad, Joseph. Heart of Darkness. Blackwood's Magazine, 1899. 92


Silencing the Other in Frankenstein and Heart of Darkness

This dissertation explores how Frankenstein by Mary Shelley and Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad portray marginalized figures who are denied voice, identity, and humanity. Using ideas from Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Edward Said, and Frantz Fanon, the study argues that silencing is not just part of the story—it is built into the structure of the narratives themselves.

Both texts, though written in different periods and styles, show a similar pattern: powerful European voices control the narrative, while the “Other” (the Creature in Frankenstein and African characters in Heart of Darkness) are pushed to the margins. Even when these characters try to speak, their voices are filtered, ignored, or made insignificant. This reflects what Spivak calls epistemic violence, where systems of knowledge decide who can be heard and who cannot.

The dissertation highlights that dehumanization works through language, narrative structure, and social institutions. In Frankenstein, the Creature is intelligent and emotional, yet judged only by his appearance. In Heart of Darkness, African characters are reduced to anonymous figures without identity or voice. In both cases, difference becomes a reason for exclusion.

A key insight of the study is that European humanism, which claims to value equality and rationality, actually operates selectively. Only those who fit certain norms are treated as fully human. Others are seen as monstrous, primitive, or inferior.

Finally, the dissertation shows that this exclusion leads to moral collapse rather than order. Victor Frankenstein’s tragedy and Kurtz’s downfall reveal the consequences of denying humanity to others. These texts remain relevant today, as similar patterns of marginalization and silencing continue in modern society.


Bibliography

Primary sources

Conrad, Joseph. Heart of Darkness. Blackwood's Magazine, 1899.

Shelley, Mary Wollstonecraft. Frankenstein, or, The Modern Prometheus. Lackington, Hughes, Harding, Mavor, and Jones, 1818.


Secondary sources

Achebe, Chinua. “An Image of Africa: Racism in Conrad’s Heart of Darkness.” Muse, season-01 2016, muse.jhu.edu/article/612953.Accessed 16 Jan. 2026.


Baba, Jafar. “Decolonizing Classics: Frankenstein in a Postcolonial Perspective.” Euacademic, 2023, euacademic.org/UploadArticle/5761.pdf.Accessed 16 Jan. 2026.


Baskota, Dhananjaya. “Subalternity in Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness.” Damak Campus Journal, vol. 13, no. 1, Dec. 2024, pp. 15–24. https://doi.org/10.3126/dcj.v13i1.74477.


Chakrabarty, Dipesh. “Subaltern Studies in Retrospect and Reminiscence.” Economic and Political Weekly, vol. 48, no. 12, 2013, pp. 23–27. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/23527142.Accessed 16 Jan. 2026.


Davis, James P. “Frankensteinand the Subversion of the Masculine Voice.” Women S Studies, vol. 21, no. 3, June 1992, pp. 307–22. https://doi.org/10.1080/00497878.1992.9978946.


Dawood, Murtdha, and Muntadher Hashim. “Colonial Beliefs in the Frankenstein Era.” Iarconsortium, 10 Nov. 2022, iarconsortium.org/iarjel/27/120/colonial-beliefs-in-the-frankenstein-era-2049.Accessed 16 Jan. 2026.


D’Souza, Tanya, and Hemangi Amol Bhagwat. “Master-Slave Dialectic and Mimicry: A Postcolonial Analysis of the Subjectivity of Frankenstein and His Monster in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein.” Researchgate, Dec. 2020, www.researchgate.net/publication/346988659_Master-Slave_Dialectic_and_Mimicry_A_Postcolonial_Analysis_of_the_Subjectivity_of_Frankenstein_and_his_Monster_in_Mary_Shelley%27s_Frankenstein?utm_source=. Accessed 6 Mar. 2026.


Grigoria Karamanidou, Niki. “VOICE AND SILENCE OF THE GENDERED SUBALTERN IN MARY SHELLEY’S FRANKENSTEIN.” Sase, 2025, sase.org.rs/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/The-SASE-Journal-No.-1.pdf#page=57. Accessed 6 Mar. 2026.


Hasan, Mariwan, et al. “View of Imperialism, Colonialism and Racism in Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness: A Postcolonial Approach.” Unai, 2021, jurnal.unai.edu/acuity/article/view/2385/1835. Accessed 6 Mar. 2026.


Koegler, Caroline. “Posthumanism and Colonial Discourse: Nineteenth Century Literature and Twenty-First Century Critique.” Openlibhums, 10 Dec. 2020, olh.openlibhums.org/article/id/4661. Accessed 16 Jan. 2026.


Marina, Khan, et al. Marlowe as Colonialist: A Postcolonial Study of ‘Heart of Darkness.’ 15 Sept. 2022, jprpk.com/index.php/jpr/article/view/107?utm_source


Mastropierro, Lorenzo, and Kathy Conklin. “Racism and Dehumanization in Heart of Darkness and Its Italian Translations: A Reader Response Analysis.” Language and Literature International Journal of Stylistics, vol. 28, no. 4, Nov. 2019, pp. 309–25. https://doi.org/10.1177/0963947019884450


Norman, Pat. “Giving Voice to the Other: Frankenstein and Heart of Darkness as Imperial  Disavowal.” Academia, www.academia.edu/24269716/Giving_Voice_to_the_Other_Frankenstein_and_Heart_of_Darkness_as_Imperial_Disavowal. Accessed 6 Mar. 2026. 


Sathyaraj, M. “Subaltern Voice in Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness.” Language in India, by Annamalai University, edited by T. Deivasigamani, vol. 18, no. 3, Mar. 2018, pp. 255–57. www.languageinindia.com/march2018/auseminar2/sathyarajheartofdarknessconrad1.pdf?utm_sourc.


Shaifuddin, Mohammed. “Justine Moritz, a Subaltern in Frankenstein; or, the Modern Prometheus.” Justine, 2022, www.eajournals.org/wp-content/uploads/Justine-Moritz.pdf?utm_source.Accessed 16 Jan. 2026.


Shalghin, Akram. “Monstrosity and the Search for an Identity in Frankenstein.” ResearchGate, May 2024, www.researchgate.net/publication/380684178_Monstrosity_and_the_Search_for_an_Identity_in_Frankenstein. Accessed 16 Jan. 2026.


Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty. “Can The Subaltern Speak?” Marxism and the Interpretation of Culture, edited by Cary Nelson and Lawrence Grossberg, 1988, jan.ucc.nau.edu/~sj6/Spivak%20CanTheSubalternSpeak.pdf.


Sut, Nitul. “Heart of Darkness Dehumanization of Africa and Africans.” Academia, 2020, www.academia.edu/81856766/Heart_of_Darkness_Dehumanization_of_Africa_and_Africans.Accessed 16 Jan. 2026.


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