Sunday, November 10, 2019
Belonging Related Text Essay
George Orwellââ¬â¢s essays ââ¬â related text ââ¬ËMarrakechââ¬â¢ explores the notion of ethnocentricity through a Eurocentric perspective, in which one is isolated at the consequence of differing morels. Orwell succeeds in doing so through various anecdotes ââ¬Å"What does Morocco mean to a Frenchman? An orange-grove or a job in government service. â⬠In essence this displays the failure of a migrant to withhold a deeper connection to the land. Orwell emotively describes the crippled elderly women who ââ¬Å"answered with a shrill wail, almost a scream, which was partly gratitude but mainly surpriseâ⬠, as a response to the charity he provided her with. The dramatic reaction displays her sense of alienation from her own homeland, at fault of those who are foreign, yet awfully powerful. This is furthered through the description of ââ¬Å"the shy, wide-eyed Negroâ⬠where through his ignorance, he ââ¬Å"has been taught that the white race are his masters, and still believes it. â⬠A sense of melancholy pervades this essay through the harsh truth ââ¬Å"How much longer can we go on kidding these people? â⬠displaying the indigenous peoples disconnection to a place that was originally theirs. While ââ¬ËMarrakechââ¬â¢ explores the notion that one does not belong to their homeland. This is juxtaposed through ââ¬ËShooting an Elephantââ¬â¢ with Orwellââ¬â¢s alternative experience of belonging. Through Orwellââ¬â¢s ambivalence we see the highly controversial understanding of ââ¬Å"the hollowness.. of the white manââ¬â¢s dominion in the East. â⬠It is ironic that a ââ¬Å"sub-divisional police officerâ⬠should feel self-conscious with such authority. Controversially he ââ¬Å"was all for the Burmeseâ⬠juxtaposed to the grotesque imagery of his deepest desire to ââ¬Å"drive a bayonet into a Buddhist priestââ¬â¢s guts.
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