George Orwell Shooting An Elephant Summary

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Generally, as a human being, the unplanned choices one make might have long-lasting effects. In "Shooting an Elephant," by George Orwell, the author narrates an experience of his life when he was about twenty years old during which he had to choose the lesser of two evils. Some years later, that experience seems to still haunt him. The story takes place at somehow times of imperialism during the five miserable years Orwell spends in Burma as a British police officer. Although Orwell repudiates his circumstance in life and when he is facing a moral dilemma, an invaluable work animal has to die to save his honor. The despondent young officer Orwell lives in mental isolation. Also, Orwell feels repugnance to the British imperialism and …show more content…

Orwell is a colonist within a colony and is therefore bestowed with a influential position of authority. As part of the white police force, he has strict obligation to his country and the British empire; anyhow, he rejects the political injustices of imperial life and despises the “real motives for which a despotic government act”. Because Orwell's actions, such as his reluctance to carry out his assignment advice as well that he is not agreeing with what his duties demand. Anyhow, he regrets having shot the elephant but more to the point he regrets having been part of colonialism and imperialism; he thinks those were harmful to both colonized and colonizers and he regrets his involvement. Orwell does not believe in imperialism; his original intentions were intimidating the elephant into submission “I had never shot an elephant and never wanted to” however, those intentions changed when he realized that the Burmese were expecting him to execute the elephant “The elephant was going to be shot. They were watching me as they would watch a conjurer about to perform a trick” His own beliefs were sacrificed for his own country’s political conquest. Moreover, Orwell himself is a symbol of that everything was bad with the colonial British rule and he himself is aware of it “The young Buddhist priest were the worst of all. There were several thousands of them in town and none of them seemed to have anything to do

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