Shooting An Elephant Essay

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    A Life Taken, and a Life Saved Sometimes shooting a defenseless animal in certain scenarios could be ethical. Although maybe not advantageous for both parties involved the decision must have been be made. In George Orwell’s story “Shooting an Elephant” he is faced with a moral dilemma to either shoot a grazing animal that has destroyed a village, and killed a person. Or, to leave it be until it can be contained, by either animal control or the owner. When the life of an animal is taken, it must be

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    Shooting An Elephant

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    Human nature George Orwell's “Shooting an Elephant” revolves around Orwell himself, a British colonial officer in Burma, and the decisions he makes. One day orwell receives a call asking if he can deal with wild elephant ravaging in the streets. When Orwell sees the elephant he notices that it is of no harm and does not need to be killed, although a large crowd of native Burmans pressure him into shooting the animal. Although Orwell knows it is wrong to shoot the elephant, he does so against the will

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    Shooting An Elephant

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    the essay, “Shooting an Elephant”, the author George Orwell has worked extremely hard to express and relate the meaning of the symbols to the story. The protagonist character George Orwell is the British imperial police officer in Burma and is hated by Burmese people because he is a part of the British Empire, the oppressor of the Burma. Orwell does show sympathy over native people of Burma but he cannot do anything to change the minds of the British Empire. After finding an elephant that was out

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    Shooting An Elephant

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    “Shooting an Elephant” Orwell was born in 1903 during the British imperial time and the Orwell family was not a wealthy family. Readers can easily see that his younger days were less satisfying due to the harsh time of the British imperial time. Although his family was not wealthy, he found his gift for writing at an early age of five or six years old. He published his first book called, “Awake Young Men Of England” at the age of eleven. He continued his writing career in his adult years and succeeded

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    Shooting An Elephant

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    George Orwell’s 1936 short story “Shooting an elephant,” features a protagonist compelled to questionable action by the mob. A police officer based in Burma who was not liked or accepted by the Burmese people is compelled to kill an elephant that is causing harm to everything in its path as in killing a man and destroying a hut. He took his gun thinking he would use it to frighten the animal but as he travelled towards the elephant the pressure to kill the elephant increases at every turn. The more

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    Shooting an Elephant

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    Shooting an elephant written by George Orwell brings to light the evil of imperialism. Being a police officer in the lower Burma, Orwell hated his job. The reason was because the people in Burma ridiculed, insulted and laughed at him whenever they felt safe to do so. Orwell opposed imperialism, and thus was able to feel the hatred of the people of Burma, but still resented them. The story starts with Orwell receiving a phone call about a tame elephant destroying bazaar. He carried with him an old

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    Shooting An Elephant

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    The function of the first few paragraphs in “Shooting an Elephant” is to establish the setting and an insight of the narrator's position as a colonial British police officer. This short story is told in Moulmein, in Lower Burma. Narrator, George Orwell expresses to the reader that he was not well liked among his town. He is torn between hating the empire and being treated poorly by the Burmese. He states, “All I knew was that I was stuck between my hatred of the empire I served and my rage against

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    Shooting An Elephant

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    The story, “Shooting an Elephant”, is very descriptive and intriguing. George Orwell, the author, uses small words throughout this story that get the audience’s attention. He even has different lines that readers remember when the title is spoken of. Because he is so thorough in the plot taking place, the audience has an opportunity to feel as if they were there and saw everything that has happened. George Orwell’s stylistic choices related to pace, tone, and character development enable him to be

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    Shooting An Elephant

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    The short story Shooting an Elephant by George Orwell is about Orwell’s experience with peer pressure as a sub-divisional police officer in Moulmein, Lower Burma. This experience occurred during the 1930s when the Burmese had a very strong anti-European feeling because they did not want people who are not natives controlling their own country`s domestic and international affairs. It commenced when the sub-inspector at a police station asked him to control an elephant who wrecked the bazaar, livestock

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    Shooting an Elephant

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    In George Orwell’s “Shooting an Elephant”, Orwell is presented with a task that causes him a great deal of stress as he battles with his internal conflict throughout the story. Orwell has mixed feelings after he kills the elephant. He feels wrong for killing the elephant because he feels that there could have been a more peaceful solution and killing it will bring more harm than good. He also feels that he killed it just because of his own pride. Although killing the elephant may seem wrong to Orwell

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