Kipling suggests that when young white men take up the "white man's burden," they bear the responsibility of civilizing and ruling over people in colonized countries. This burden may lead to hardship and conflict, as they strive to fulfill their duties as imperial rulers.
Kipling suggested that the white man's reward for carrying his burden was the satisfaction of fulfilling his duty and the feeling of superiority over the people he was helping.
In his poem "The White Man's Burden," Kipling suggests that it is the duty of Europeans to civilize and educate non-European peoples through imperialism. He emphasizes the perceived responsibilities and burdens that come with the assumed superiority of the white race.
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In Rudyard Kipling's poem "The White Man's Burden," the white man is portrayed as having the responsibility to bring civilization and progress to colonized territories. The poem implies that it is the duty of the white man to educate and uplift non-white populations for their own benefit.
Kipling characterizes native peoples as "sullen" and infantile in his poem "The White Man's Burden." He portrays them as in need of Western civilization and culture to be saved from their primitive ways.
Rudyard Kipling
The rhyme scheme for the poem "The White Man's Burden" by Rudyard Kipling is ABAB CDCD EFEF GHGH.
The audience for "The Black Man's Burden" include people who have some educational background and the imperialists.
The title of the essay Rudyard Kipling wrote promoting European racial dominance was "The White Man's Burden".
The White ManÃ?s Burden is a 19th century poem by Rudyard Kipling that implied the act of colonialism was the noble responsibility of European and Americans to help the natives of these countries to rise up and better themselves. The poem, in general, referred to the period of colonization of countries by European powers sometimes called cultural Imperialism as a noble Christian effort.
That europeans were responsible for educating non-civilized people.
"The White Man's Burden" was written by Rudyard Kipling as a poem calling on the United States to take up the "burden" of empire, specifically in the context of American colonization of the Philippines in the late 19th century.