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Social Studies, 12.08.2020 05:01 bandnerd1

The obvious culture clash in Shooting an Elephant is that between the colonizers and the colonized, the British and the Burmese. The British represent the industrial West with its notions of civic administration and its technological excellence; the Burmese represent a powerless pre-industrial society set upon by an industrial superpower looking beyond its own borders for a field of action. The Burmese despise the British; the British condescend to the Burmese. Less obvious, but far more important, are two other culture clashes. The first is the ethical difference setting the narrator, as a representative of the West, apart from the native Burmese, who belong to the local village-culture and live in a pre-industrial world from which the West itself has long since emerged. The narrator does not want to kill the elephant; the crowd does. The mob's thirst for violence is very different from the narrator's hope of avoiding it. The second less obvious culture clash takes place within the narrator himself. Here the personal culture of an ethical Western individual is at odds with his institutional culture; the narrator's personal values-his sense that the dead Burmese has been, in some manner, crucified, and that the elephant is a victim pure and simple-clash with his duty as a colonial policeman.

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The obvious culture clash in Shooting an Elephant is that between the colonizers and the colonized,...
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