Imperialism In The Glass Palace

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Mircea Eliade writes; “All over the world learning the language of animals, especially of birds, is equivalent to knowing the secrets of nature…..” (Eliade:98) The human form should understand this silent language of nature as we are part of it not the master of it. The Glass Palace demonstrates this picture in one of the incidents where the tame elephants are used for the transportation as the Europeans find them perfect for their commercial profits: Yet until the Europeans came none of them had ever thought of using elephants for the purpose of logging . . . It was the Europeans who saw that tame elephants could be made to work for human profit . . . the entire way of life is their creation.... this method of girdling trees, these ways of moving logs with elephants, this system of floating them downriver . . . (74, 75) …show more content…

Dislocation of thousands is also a brutal face of the colonization and this face has a fine portrait in the novel, when King Thebaw is on his way to exile recounts the incidents when the British has brought the Indians to Rangoon for their profit. He says: Many Indians lived there…..The British had brought them there, to work in the docks and the mills, to pull …show more content…

Amitav Ghosh highlights these annihilations as the result of the bombardments, emission of the toxic gases in the environment, number of casualties, water fronts, mills are the targets. The attackers have demolished the ware houses, oil tanks and the thriving sounds of bombarding; the hazardous clouds of smoke are the creators of air and noise pollution and a threat to the human and non-human worlds and ardently contributing in the environmental degradation. Harold Fromm in From Transcendence to Obsolescence: A Route Map uses a phrase for humans “man unconquerable mind”(21), which is truly evident in The Glass of

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