In the reading‚ Shooting an Elephant‚ George Orwell is narrating about his feeling and pressure shooting an elephant. A little about the writer‚ Orwell‚ is a British police officer who was born in India. He was hated by large numbers of people in Moulmein‚ in Lower Burma as the British had colonized Burma. One day he was notified that there was an elephant roaming around the street. The elephant was however not wild but everyone were frightened since it was enormous and disrupting. It made people
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The pigs are perhaps the most interesting characters in the novel‚ "Animal Farm"‚ written by George Orwell. They bring conflict and perceive as the most important animals in their Animal Revolution and most important people involved in Russian history. Throughout this fairytale‚ they become what they had hoped to destroy. The role of the pigs in this story is that they are true leaders. They represent the Bolsheviks of Russia. They are the highest in the animal society structure and highest in the
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"I marched down the hill‚ looking and feeling a fool‚ with the rifle over my shoulder and an ever-growing army of people jostling at my heels" (Orwell 3). In George Orwell’s story‚ Shooting the Elephant‚ the narrator is faced with a strenuous decision that is against a somewhat formidable foe. The foe is not some lunatic of a man‚ but a raging elephant. The elephant has been causing amok in the town. The narrator‚ who is also a police officer‚ is called down to investigate the havoc that is being
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Mark Morrison Page 1 Professor Bautista English 110 October 8‚ 2012 “Shooting an Elephant” by George Orwell In his essay “Shooting an Elephant‚” George Orwell recounts a time in his life when as a British police officer in India‚ he was faced with the moral dilemma of having to shoot an elephant in order to save his pride. In the beginning of the essay‚ Orwell describes it as a time of tension and hostility. For example‚ if a European woman was seen walking alone in a bazaar she
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The Oceania society depicted in the 1984 George Orwell novel is simply driven by propaganda. It seems as though every citizen of the "Super State" country must interact with a daily intake of propaganda create by the government so that control is maintained. Even the "non-citizen" Proletarian community‚ which is the ignorant majority‚ is lead into a life filled with propaganda that inflicts feelings such as fear and hatred so that they can be controlled in a mental manner. As an inner Party member
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“Shooting an Elephant” Response Orwell did not get along with the Burmese‚ nor did he like them because they would make fun of him and enjoyed insulting him while on duty. As for the British Raj‚ he felt as if the Raj was a cruel and aggressive government ruler and that his hatred towards him was so great that he would “drive a bayonet into a Buddhist priest’s guts.” (pg.3). Therefore Orwell being a white man has a great conflict with the Burmese. In paragraph 2‚ he began to talk about how
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1984 by George Orwell explores the challenging relationships between different sets of powerplay. It ultimately maneuvers subordinates into positions where it is able to hold power against them‚ shaping the wants and desires of the powerless. The public awareness of this use of power is nil‚ as everyone struggles to be the perfect party member‚ yet as individuals‚ the desire to hold what is beyond their grasp calls them‚ and members of the public strive to find the pieces of their independence
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In his dystopian novel‚ 1984‚ George Orwell portrays a society under a harsh totalitarian regime. The protagonist Winston is an unlikely hero because of his fatalistic nature and the subtlety of his rebellion. He risks exposing himself by daring to act on his own sense of individuality. The paradox of hope´s presence in a dystopia highlights the little optimism in the novel. Hope is generated by characters who are able to recognize the wrong in society that others seem oblivious to‚ and resist‚ even
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A Socratic question Back in high school‚ during a Socratic seminar for senior English‚ a question was raised. Specifically that day’s session concerned George Orwell’s classic‚ 1984. The seminar was a forum for the class to discuss points of interest within the literature through a Socratic questioning process. The purpose of such an exercise was to promote critical thinking and open-ended discussion about the salience of the ideas within the book. Unfortunately‚ much of the class was less than
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In the book Animal Farm by George Orwell the animals rebel against Mr. Jones. The animals thought they were being treated badly‚ but didn’t really know what was in the future for them. In Animal Farm the animals don’t get the amount of food like they need‚ and they also have to work long hard hours everyday. Before the rebel the animals think that they were not getting fed enough‚ but they have no idea what’s about to happen to them. The animals actually got treated basically the same way they did
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