George Orwell

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    have long-lasting effects on them. In "Shooting an Elephant," by George Orwell, the author goes back to a situation in his life when he was a young adult where he had to make a choice between evil deeds. Many years later, the decision still haunted him. It takes place back when Orwell was a British police officer in Burma. He reevaluates his situation in life when he encounters a moral dilemma; to kill or save an elephant. Orwell is a confused and unhappy young policeman who lives in mental isolation

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    George Orwell is a police officer in Lower Burma. In this essay, he writes about the evils of imperialism through symbols. Although "Shooting an Elephant" has plenty of symbols, the most relevant symbols are the Burmese people, the elephant itself, and the rifles. Through the essay, the Burmese people represent oppression. Being in an oppressed state, makes the Burmese feel trapped. To relieve the feeling of controlled the Burmese use emotional abuse. "The insults hooted after me when I was at

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    Biography On June 25, 1903, George Orwell, originally named Eric Arthur Blair, was born. Born in Motihari, India, but moved to England with his mother, Ida and sister, Marjorie when he was one-year-old. Richard, his father was a British Civil Servant who stayed in India because he was stationed there. Growing up, Orwell did not see his father much until he retired in 1912. (Biography.com) When he was five years old, Orwell attended a parish school in Henley. A few years later, he received a partial

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    Society in the Russian Revolution is so broken that people needed to fight for a better government. In Animal Farm by George Orwell, tells a tale of an important event through personification in animals so they can represent Russian Revolutions characters and items so that they would rebel. By the representation of the animals in Animal Farm, Orwell shows how a dysfunctional society can be broken and fixed through propaganda, pride, and hypocrisy. As the animals start to rebel against Napoleon they

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    In George Orwell novel nineteen-eighty four Winston is being alienated by the Party because it  try to make Winston think, act, do everything a certain way. The Party controls Winston by the telescreen, thought police, and the children spies. The social regime/ the Party shapes or influences the characters because of the way they use brainwashing and physical control for punishment. The Thought Police, who "snoop in on conversations, always watching your every move, controlling the minds and thoughts

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    George Orwell’s Animal Farm is structured as an allegory because it allows Orwell to light-heartedly highlight certain political actions, social circumstances and government leaders related to Soviet communism without explicitly defaming the Soviet Union itself, who at the time were valuable allies in WWII. Orwell wrote Animal Farm as an allegory in order to freely express his concerns about the Soviet Union and its communist form of government. In hindsight, the Soviet Union’s Joseph Stalin will

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    Throughout the book of Animal Farm written by George Orwell showed very clearly that Animal Farm, as a whole, was a dystopia because of strict ruling as well as the dystopian traits that the farm fits into. A utopia is a perfect society where everything is perfect while a dystopia lives under fear and confusion. Animal Farm shows a dystopian society because under the ruling of Napoleon the animals lived in fear as well as the animals were always confused on why their ruler was doing specific ideas

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    George Orwell and Jimmy Cross Character Comparison In the two short stories, Shooting an Elephant and the Things They Carried there are certain similarities and differences that George Orwell and Jimmy Cross hold. Each character in the short stories has there own different situation they are in, but they both are in a foreign land and they both have to take orders and do what there country is asking of them. However, even though each situation is different they both deal with some of the same emotional

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    "Shooting an Elephant" is an essay by George Orwell, first published in the literary magazine New Writing in the autumn of 1936 and broadcast by the BBC Home Service on October 12, 1948. The essay describes the experience of the English narrator, possibly Orwell himself, called upon to shoot an aggressive elephant while working as a police officer in Burma. Because the locals expect him to do the job, he does so against his better judgment, his anguish increased by the elephant 's slow and painful

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    In “shooting an elephant” George Orwell describes his experience as a police officer in Burma at the time colonialization. Orwell narrates a story when he had to kill an elephant because Orwell did not want to feel inferior in front of Burmese people. Also, Orwell’s encounter with the wild elephant insight him into the true nature of the imperialism. Moreover, Orwell, in “shooting an elephant”, uses elephant as a symbol of the British Empire. He explains the effects of British Empire on the people

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