English, asked by fatimaayaz01, 6 months ago

How was Orwell treated by the local Burmese?​

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Answered by speechlessmirror85
11

Answer:

The narrator of Orwell's classic short story "Shooting an Elephant" is a British police officer stationed in Lower Burma, where he is ridiculed, mocked, and jeered at by the local Burmese civilians. As an agent of the oppressive colonial regime, the officer is hated by the locals, who resent the presence of the British and the discrimination and abuse they suffer at the hands of the ruling colonial government. The British officer mentions that the predominant atmosphere of Lower Burma was anti-European and recognizes himself as a prime target for the disgruntled Burmese natives....

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Answered by inamdartuba1217
0

Answer:

The narrator of Orwell's classic short story "Shooting an Elephant" is a British police officer stationed in Lower Burma, where he is ridiculed, mocked, and jeered at by the local Burmese civilians. As an agent of the oppressive colonial regime, the officer is hated by the locals, who resent the presence of the British and the discrimination and abuse they suffer at the hands of the ruling colonial government. The British officer mentions that the predominant atmosphere of Lower Burma was anti-European and recognizes himself as a prime target for the disgruntled Burmese natives....

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