Theme Of Capital Punishment In A Hanging By George Orwell

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George Orwell’s “A Hanging”, set in Burma in the late 1920’s, tells his experience as a police officer witnessing a specific execution. Throughout his career on the police force, Orwell was an ardent retentionist, someone who supports capital punishment for certain crimes. However, this execution revealed to him the brutality of capital punishment, causing him to shift to abolitionism, the thought that capital punishment should be abolished. After quitting his job as a police officer, he wrote this story to show the heinous reality of capital punishment. Using the dialogue and mannerisms of the characters in this story, Orwell conveys his abolitionist message through the prisoner, the superintendent, the guards, and the dog. The prisoner …show more content…

However, his strongest technique is personal and expert testimony. As a police officer in Burma, his opinion is considered an expert opinion. However he also witnessed this and many other executions, therefore his experience also qualifies as personal testimony. Both of these techniques are considered strong techniques for a formal argumentative essay. Orwell also uses two major points concerning capital punishment in his story. The first is the sociopolitical argument, meaning it risks ending the life of an innocent person. This argument is obvious when the prisoner starts chanting “Ram!”(101) because in his religion, if a person can say that before death, he is still a good person. Orwell’s other and main reason for why capital punishment should be abolished is the ethical argument, meaning there is no justification for taking a human life. He states his opinion when he says, “I saw the mystery, the unspeakable wrongness, of cutting a life short when it is in full tide”(101). Through this statement, he confirms his claim that no matter what crime a person commits, they do not deserve capital punishment. This is the most argumentative quote in the entire story, for it is the only place that Orwell directly states that capital punishment is

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