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Role Of British Imperialism In Shooting Of An Elephant By George Orwell

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George Orwell was a great critic of political and social institutions as seen in many of his works including “Shooting of an Elephant” and 1984. “Shooting of an Elephant” is a short narrative of a British “sub-divisional police officer” (1,1) in colonized Burma. It tells of the role that he played as a figure of power given to him by Britain but the pressure he felt from those whose country had ceased to be their own, the Burmese people. 1984 is a dystopian, futuristic novel about a society, Oceania, in which all “citizens” are slaves of fear and oppression due to the overbearing, overly intrusive government. 1984 demonstrates Orwell’s disapproval of British Imperialism in the 1940s shown by its harsh critique of totalitarian practices. In both “Shooting of an Elephant” and 1984 the government practices social oppression, a lack of leverage among their citizens and the implementation of authority figures to control and repress the citizens and servants they oversee. These authoritarian tactics place restrictions on their citizens and servants, such as, the fear of opposition, passivity of the masses, and an ultimate distrust of the government as a whole. Social oppression is a clear objective of the British imperialists in Burma and the Party, Oceania’s government in 1984. The government’s control of the people of Oceania is intrusive and dehumanizing. Tactics used to lessen the citizen’s freedom were newspeak, thoughtcrime and doublethink. Newspeak is the language of

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