Shooting an Elephant by George Orwell

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‘Shooting an Elephant’ is a short story written by George Orwell in 1936. The story is about a young British man who serves as a police officer in Burma, which is part of British India in the 1920s. This policeman is torn between his hate for the British occupation and the abuse he gets from the natives on a daily basis. Politically, he is on the Burmese side because he despises the oppressive British rule in Burma. Even though he is against the occupation, he has to act superior over the natives in order to maintain British power over the land. The policeman is against imperialism because he believes it humiliates and restricts the freedom of the natives in their own land. Not only that, but it also causes people to be prejudiced towards the Burmese, which in return makes the natives resent them. Through anaphora, epiphany and symbolism, the narrator was able to represent the Burmese people in ways to make a larger point about imperialism.

From the start of the story, the narrator explores the theme of the evil of imperialism. Not only does imperialism limit the freedom of the oc...

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