Characterism In Gulliver's Travels

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The protagonist and namesake of the novel, Gulliver’s Travels by Johnathan Swift serves as a venue for Swift to air his opinions about the state of the world he lives in. Gulliver, a shipman from England, travels around a fantastical world after he is shipwrecked, then thrown overboard by his own crew. The places he visits on his travels are sardonic representations of real world countries, and the people he meets are also representations of the natives each place represents. Gulliver’s view as an outsider, especially of that of an outsider hailing from a country that, at the time, attempted to colonize and anglicize the rest of the world allow for Swift to write a satirical novel on human nature and our views of cultures and people that are …show more content…

He is left on the island of the Houyhnhnms. Well versed in meeting new cultures, Gulliver gathers a gift for the humans he expects to meet. On his journey there he is attacked by a group of barbaric humans called Yahoos, and is saved by the Houyhnhnms, who are horses. Gulliver rejects the Yahoos, seeing them as apes after their attack and identifies with the Houyhnhnms, even though they are the furthest from Gulliver’s own kind. He quickly assimilates into their culture and continues to fear the Yahoos. When he learns that the Yahoos are human, he is shocked and explains that while the Houyhnhnms are the barbarians’ owner, in England, the Yahoos would own the Houyhnhnms. They are shocked by the fact that in England they are the beasts of burden, like the Yahoos of the island are to them. He remains on the island until an Assembly of the Houyhnhnms rules that Gulliver, is a danger to their civilization because he is a much more logical and reasoned Yahoo, and throws him from the island. Much to his displeasure Gulliver is rescued by a Portuguese ship and is returned home. When he gets home he rejects his society and chooses to buy a pair of horses and lives and speaks with them exclusively due to his attachment to the …show more content…

To someone that identifies as a Houyhnhnm and lives only with a pair of horses. His descent into insanity is marked by the views he is exposed to on his travels, and his new view that the Anglican views he grew up with were barbaric rather than how he felt at the beginning of the novel, where anything that was Anglican was considered barbaric by him. Gulliver’s view as an outsider, especially of that of an outsider hailing from a country that, at the time, attempted to colonize and anglicize the rest of the world allow for Swift to write a satirical novel on human nature and our views of cultures and people that are foreign to our own, and eventually serves to question the sane versus the insane and the moral versus immoral people that he comes into contact with on his

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