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Individual Beliefs in Shooting an Elephant; by George Orwell

Uploaded by sls465 on Apr 18, 2007

Individual Beliefs in "Shooting an Elephant" by Orwell

It's ironic how some individuals are willing to push aside their moral beliefs in what is right or wrong to gain acceptance. “In Shooting An Elephant” by George Orwell we see how he puts all his true beliefs to the side to gain some sort of closure on the way the people view him. At times people are put in complex situations where they have to decide between what’s right and wrong without knowing the outcome.

The building up of the feeling of pressure starts with Orwell feeling humiliated and disrespected from the Burmese and shifts to a feeling of authority and presence as a result of the elephant's closeness. It was a common feeling for the Burmese to be bitter towards Europeans as a result of imperialism. It seemed as though the Burmese had grown a feeling of hatred towards the British Empire. They took their hatred as far as humiliating him by tripping him in a football field in front of a large sneering crowd. "In the end the sneering yellow faces of young men that met me everywhere, the insults hooted after me when I was at a safe distance, got badly on my nerves.” All this was confusing and upsetting for him to the point where it poked at his self-esteem forcing him to dwell upon it constantly making him feel that the Burmese people made his job impossible.

The persistent mockery and festering anger of the Burmese people towards Orwell shapes itself differently when "early one morning the sub inspector at a police station or the end of town rang me up on the phone and said that an elephant was ravaging the bazaar would I please come and do something about it"?

"As I started forward practically the whole population of the quarter flocked out the houses and followed me.” They had seen the rifle in his hand and were all shouting excitedly that he was going to shoot the elephant. This made him feel important, powerful in control and finally gaining an upper hand as a singled out European in a bitter Burmese society. He did not want to shoot the elephant but realized it was expected of him and he had to do it. He was being pushed and pressured toward it by the...

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Uploaded by:   sls465

Date:   04/18/2007

Category:   Literature

Length:   3 pages (667 words)

Views:   4103

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