Shooting An Elephant Essay

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    Entitlement of Decision Making (A critique of Shooting an Elephant…) “Unanticipated choices one is forced to make can have long-lasting effects” (Crask). George Orwell was the top novelist of the 20th century. In this personal narrative, he describes a dark experience that he often uses to describe the events of his life. Through this essay, he creates a personal narrative that allows a sad story to be enraged between the messages that are involved creating into the messages of this story. George

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    George Orwell’s “Shooting an Elephant” is a story about a time in his life when he was a young police officer in Burma. He comes across a seemingly undangerous elephant while he was on duty. The narrator has to decide what the right thing is to do in this situation. He then becomes pressured into killing the elephant by social and political themes that he couldn’t escape or ignore. In the story, the themes of imperialism, the conscience, and the conflict between the Europeans and Burmese people

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    Summary of "Shooting An Elephant" In George Orwell's essay "Shooting An Elephant," Orwell works as a sub divisional police officer in the town of Moulmein. One morning Orwell receives a phone call from the sub inspector at a police station from the other end of the town telling him a tame elephant has escaped and is causing chaos. Orwell begins his short journey towards the elephant bringing a gun with him, expecting the noise to scare it away. Once he arrived at the destination, he would find the

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    would not care for the respect of the natives, but at that moment “they did not like [him], but with the magical rifle in [his] hands [he] was momentarily worth watching”, contributing to the pressure not to be laughed at (3). Throughout “Shooting An Elephant”, the author repeated that “every white man’s life in the East was one long struggle not to be laughed at”, which conveys personal motives (3). It is an example of Orwell’s fear of mockery. It also represents the fear of imperialists of a loss

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    In the essay, Shooting an Elephant, written by George Orwell, makes references into today’s society; Orwell’s essay states how society wears “masks” and eventually grow to fit them and he was a slave to this, he was forced to be someone he wasn't. Through the documentary, Bigger, Stronger, Faster, Bell tells of the aftereffects that the “mask” that has been put on by America. Virginia Woolf’s novel, A Room of One's Own, states how women have had expectations in society to be only a servant to their

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    George Orwell’s “Shooting an Elephant” is a short story that serves as a metaphor for Imperialism in the early 20th century. He recalls being an officer in Moulmein, Burma, an area that was occupied by the British until 1948, while he served there he dealt with the issues of Imperialism and he uses the story to express those issues. He uses the metaphor of the elephant to express how Imperialism affected the British and the Burmese(occupied people) in a negative way. The British were represented

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    The elephant is a strong and resilient species. Killing one is no easy task. The animal can only be taken down with multiple shots from one of the highest caliber rifles a man can operate singlehanded. Only a precise and well placed shots from a powerful outside force can kill such a being. For this reason, it is the perfect symbolic catalyst for George Orwell in his essay “Shooting an Elephant”. To help voice Orwell’s anti-imperialistic views, the elephant could symbolize many things, however, three

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    In George Orwells’s “Shooting an Elephant”, we see how the author describes how he is in a very special and difficult circumstance. The background information he gives in the story explains how he was born and raised in India, but went to school in England. Soon after, he became an officer for the English government but was stationed over in India during their imperialistic reign. Much of this information is useful to the reader in helping understand his unique situation that he finds himself in

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    Shooting an Elephant, George Orwell merely trying to not look like a fool, an inner battle testing his morality and mind. The story taking place in Burma, the protagonist, a British police officer named George Orwell. Orwell is picked on and loathed by the Burmese, constantly enduring their tricks and pure despisement. The story truly starts when he is called into do something about a stray elephant who is raging at a bazaar. Once he arrives at the scene him, a Burmese sub-inspector and some Indian

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    The effects of imperialism harm individuals for both the oppressed and subjugating nations. George Orwell, the author of “Shooting an Elephant,” worked as a police officer for the British government in Burma. He connects the story of him shooting an elephant with the evil of imperialism. The effects of imperialism leave him with the sense of guilt, and he began to hate working for Britain because of the injustices of it. Imperialism undermines the humanity of individuals in an oppressed nation and

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