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    Shooting An Elephant The well written narrative essay of George Orwell (shooting An Elephant) and Salvation of Langston Hughes‚ dealing with their life story and experience show the set of qualities that make each author distinctive. However‚ the authors used a particular way to narrate their story making them alive. So this particular way used by each of them let make a critical comparison and contrast analysis related to each author personality. Langston Hughes toward Salvation used an

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    British writer whose literature is marked by criticism of social injustice. The essay “Shooting an Elephant” is one of George Orwell’s most well-known works. The essay was wrote in 1936‚ it describes a story what happened in 1926‚ while Orwell was working as a British police officer in Burma‚ where in order to build the role of an assertive police officer and a brave white man‚ he has to shoot an aggressive elephant. He is conflicted with his character as a white‚ male officer and the morality deep

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    Critical Analysis of "Shooting an Elephant" In George Orwell’s essay "Shooting an Elephant‚" the author’s character develops from the pressure to make a decision and the horrifying results which follow. A potential existed for Orwell to display confidence and high morals‚ but this potential was destroyed when he pulled the trigger. The death of the elephant signifies the weakness of Orwell’s character. Orwell is ashamed to had submitted to the pressure of the Burmans‚ but he does so at his own

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    Analysis of a narrative text: Shooting an Elephant (George Orwell) “Shooting an Elephant” is an autobiographically influenced short story written by George Orwell and published in 1936. It deals with the inner conflict of an imperial police officer in Burma who feels pressured by the Burmese and forced to kill an outraged elephant in order to prove himself and his status as an imperial police officer. The short story can be divided into two parts. In the first two paragraphs the narrator introduces

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    a high cost. On the other hand‚ the story "Shooting an Elephant” was wrote by George Orwell base on his personal experience in Moulmein‚ in Lower Burma .He served his country‚ "British Empire as a colonial administrator. The author described the effects on the oppressed Burmese Indians and theirs oppressor British Empire. The internal conflict of British men‚ his feelings and convictions linked to his pride from of the angry crowd. Shooting an Elephant is more than a personal experience story‚ is

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    "Shooting an Elephant" is an essay by George Orwell‚is a colonial policeman in Moulmein‚ Lower Burma who is hated and disrespected by the local people of Burma.Whom also must obey the order of the British imperialism without a choice. as Orwell suffers from the Burmese Orwell is confuses‚because he is secretly on their side‚ and opposed to the oppressive British empire he serves.through his work handling wretched prisoners gives him a close-up view of “the dirty work of Europe” in the process it

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    Imperialism ­ an irony. Imperialism is a no­win situation: ● ● ● Throughout the short text we see Orwell as a character torn between two completely juxtaposed ideals: that in support of the oppressed and the colonial. We are barely halfway through the opening sentence when Orwell declares how he was “hated by large numbers of people” and we quickly learn of the immense anger he has towards his tormentors. Initially‚ we learn of Orwell’s personal experience of power and how he is “hated by large numbers of

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    Shooting an Elephant is a self-identity essay written by George Orwell recounting his time as an Imperial guard in Burma. He describes the ways that he was treated and how he was hated and seen as a symbol of the oppressive Imperials that he worked for. Orwell discussed how he had grown disenfranchised with imperialism and decided that it “was an evil thing and the sooner I chucked up my job and got out the better.” Orwell described his job in terms where he was on the front line‚ and wrong side

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    Heat and Dust Quotes Page 2: “India always changes people‚ and I have been no exception” Page 3: “You’ll learn soon enough‚ everyone does… you have to be very careful with your food in the beginning‚ and whatever you do no food from these stalls” Page 3: “ghostly light that she looks like a ghost; and she’s wearing a white night-gown that encases her from head to foot” Page 4: “Thirty years ago I might have said there is hope: but today – none. Where ever you look it’s the same story. More wages

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    On a surface level‚ “Evil in the Kindest of Places” by Luke Hulse and “Shooting an Elephant” by George Orwell do not share an outstanding number of similarities. Given‚ both memoirs do recount a time in the life of the narrator that shaped their character in some meaningful way. The two stories shine when it comes to giving the reader a sense of the dread or futility of the situation the storyteller has found themselves in. When reading Hulse’s work‚ it is difficult not to feel the tension and terror

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