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Analysis Of Shooting An Elephant By George Orwell

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Eric Arthur Blair, or commonly known as George Orwell, is the author of many compositions. Blair, the author of two of the most famous novels of the 1920s; Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty-Four, was born in Eastern Indian. He joined the Indian Imperial Police in Burma but resigned in 1927 to become a writer (BBC). Orwell’s style of writing can be described as bold and vivid. He puts the truth in his writing. Orwell’s novel, “Shooting an Elephant,” was published in 1936. In the novel, a colonial policeman in British Burma is called in to end the life of an elephant that killed a civilian. Many like to believe that the novel is fact and a true story of Orwell’s life, due to his time in the Indian Imperial Police. The policeman in the novel …show more content…

Through the novel, George Orwell likes to show the effects of imperialism, and how it executes the way the oppressors perform their tasks. Mohammad Sarwar Alam defines imperialism as being, “[A] state of mind, fuelled by the arrogance of superiority that could be adopted by any nation irrespective of its geographical location in the world” (Alam 55). The world only sees the oppressors as arrogant white men who feed off of the country's, resources, and people of the nations they adopt. Orwell describes that there is the fear of humiliation and looking like a fool consuming their minds. Orwell says, “[E]very white man’s life, was one long struggle not to be laughed at.” (Orwell). Orwell describes that when a white man chooses the life of tyranny, he destroys his own freedom, and “ becomes a sort of hollow, posing dummy, the conventionalized figure of a sahib.” Through the novel, Orwell seems to reflect himself in the policemen and justify his time as an oppressor.
For reasons variable between others, people act differently in different situations. Sometimes the only thing that can spell the difference between right and wrong is a number of people in the room. In the short story “Shooting an Elephant” George Orwell portrays the elephant in his story as a metaphorical example. The elephant shows Orwell’s hatred towards British imperialism, the decline of British rule in Burma and the excessive force of a greater entity.
Firstly, Orwell was not a big

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