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Analyse the East-West conflict in A Passage to India.​

Answers

Answered by eratzinfantry
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Answer:

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Explanation:

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Answered by rashich1219
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East-West conflict

Explanation:

  • The east-west encounter is one among the recurrent  themes within the Indo -Anglian literature. Initially it  acquired an area and prominence because of the linguistic  reasons.
  • The socio-political aspects were associated  with it's continuous creative challenge. Englishmen's  colonizers for over hundred years  was a historically significant fact . K. R. Srinivas Iyengar says, "The theme is that the  result of the controlling factors of history and  geography and also the centrality of the influence of  English language and literature".
  • During country Raj, many Hindustani people  went to the EU countries for various reasons. The  glamorous education and therefore the liberal ways of life there  attracted thousands of easterners to the west.  
  • Many times they were disappointed.  The physical migration of the westerners to India  was also indispensable within the face of their regime in   India. there have been quite few westerners who sailed to  the Indian subcontinent because the Malay Archipelago Company  agents, the Queen's representatives, the govt  recruits and also the philanthropic missionaries.
  • They were  sometimes puzzled by the life here. Sometimes the  deplorable human conditions here distressed them.  Thus the 2 came together - the rulers and therefore the  ruled, the advanced and also the backward, the white and therefore the brown.
  • The west always tried to grasp the  mysterious east and therefore the east also attempted to seem with  admiration to the west. Through such a dialogue, the  encounter acquired substance in actual life and  consequently in literature.  There were three noticeable reasons for the increase  and development of this theme in Indo-Anglian  literature.
  • The English as a language of  its creation, their attitudes and aspirations within the  primary phase of the Indo-Anglian writing. There was a  creative tension concealed under the physical  association between the 2 nationals.
  • The ruled class  and the upper crust with their opposing social,  cultural, political and academic backgrounds provided  a variety of creative experiences to the sensitive  writers of the Indian subcontinent.
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