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Orwell did not agree with the imperialistic practices of the British, so in his heart he sided with the Burmese.
The narrator in Orwell's Shooting an Elephant feels the need to be accepted by the Burmese who hate him. He feels sympathetic to them and resents his position as a police officer. He is willing to kill a relatively harmless animal in order to look better in the eyes of the people.
Orwell is trying to make the reader feel like he is talking directly to them. He wants the reader to feel freedom and a desire to reach out for that freedom -
To feel rich and superior.
Orwell shoots the elephant when it is in heat because he is destroying property and also took someones life. Orwell didnt really want to kill it but the people following him made him feel pushed forward to do it.
how did Alexander Hamilton feel about political power and common power?
how did alexander hamilton feel about political power and common power?
how did Alexander Hamilton feel about political power and common power?
how did Alexander Hamilton feel about political power and common power?
very political
George Orwell criticizes the government's control over society through the manipulation of language in "1984." The government's use of Newspeak, a language designed to limit free thought and expression, shows how language can be used to distort reality and suppress dissent. By controlling language, the government is able to control the thoughts and behaviors of its citizens.
alexander Hamilton felt that political parties were devisive