Mithhnm And Anti-Colonialism In Gulliver's Travels

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Iris Murdoch once said “Philosophy! Empty thinking by ignorant conceited men who think they can digest without eating!” During the story of Gulliver’s travels, Gulliver seems to show a conceited angle against the Houyhnhnms. He observes these creatures as beasts with a bias of that his race is more superior to both the Houyhnhnms and the yahoos. With this said, Swift has Gulliver construct a “method of planting colonies” that turns the reader’s views of the Houyhnhnms to be seen as a race of beasts that need to be educated and civilized. Swift can be seen to support anti-colonialism though the arrogance and condescending attitude of Gulliver towards both the Houyhnhnms and the yahoos showing that through his “European eyes” Gulliver first observes them as a lesser creature then his own race but when labeled as a yahoo by the Houyhnhnms, becomes very unfavorable to his own society and even his own family. Swift’s novel is a complexity of anti-colonial references and mocks many of the standards used by the people of his time.
“Gulliver’s Travels” is a novel of a man that ends up, through a variety of mishaps, on a few unknown islands. While being a captain merchant ship, a few of his men become ill forcing Gulliver to acquire replacements in Barbados. These men are actually pirates and in a turn of events rally the crew to mutiny against Gulliver. Gulliver is left on an island to fend for himself where is soon is found by ugly human-like creatures that are later called yahoos. They attack him but he is saved by what is a horse like creature, later discovered to be called Houyhnhnms. This horse like creature takes Gulliver back to his society and introduces him to his wife, children, and servant. He’s sees that they also have yahoos...

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... Mexico, there were only a handful of soldiers that almost initially wiped the Aztec population from this earth. “The traditional story of the Aztec relationship with the Spanish, rooted in the Spanish perspective, describes how a "handful" of soldiers overwhelmed the Aztecs and wiped out their civilization.”(National Humanities Center)
Swift’s indirect masks of anti-colonialisms lays underneath a character who supports colonialism greatly. By outlining what would be seen in his time as inadequate cultures through the Houyhnhnms and the Yahoos, Swift makes a general play on both sides of the natural human spectrum. Gulliver falls in the middle wanting no part of the yahoos, in which he is more similar to, and wanting to educate and assimilate to the Houyhnhnms. Swift’s complexity of anti-colonial references mock many of the morals used by the people of his time.

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