Haider Mezaal - Academia.edu (original) (raw)

Haider Mezaal

Uploads

Papers by Haider Mezaal

Research paper thumbnail of A Passage to India: A Critique of Imperialism

English Language Institute Journal

This paper sheds light on E. M. Forster’s attack against British imperialism in colonial India. I... more This paper sheds light on E. M. Forster’s attack against British imperialism in colonial India. It argues that acquiring an official position in the imperialistic administration makes Anglo-Indians so poignant that they start making racial prejudgments about the Indians. This attitude, of course, leads to damage the possibility of establishing friendship between the Indians and the British. The novelist also argues that the inability of comprehending the echo in the caves is yet another cultural barrier; it prevents crossing the bridge between the East and the West. Due to their frustration of establishing friendship with the British, the Indians start fighting for freedom. This paper concludes by highlighting the possibility of future friendship between the British and the Indians.

Research paper thumbnail of The Marabar Caves: Their Implications in the Encounter Impasse Between West and East

Basic Education College Magazine For Educational and Humanities Sciences, 2017

Research paper thumbnail of Colonial Aspects in Rudyard Kipling’s Kim

Basic Education College Magazine For Educational and Humanities Sciences, 2017

Research paper thumbnail of A Passage to India: A Critique of Imperialism

English Language Institute Journal

This paper sheds light on E. M. Forster’s attack against British imperialism in colonial India. I... more This paper sheds light on E. M. Forster’s attack against British imperialism in colonial India. It argues that acquiring an official position in the imperialistic administration makes Anglo-Indians so poignant that they start making racial prejudgments about the Indians. This attitude, of course, leads to damage the possibility of establishing friendship between the Indians and the British. The novelist also argues that the inability of comprehending the echo in the caves is yet another cultural barrier; it prevents crossing the bridge between the East and the West. Due to their frustration of establishing friendship with the British, the Indians start fighting for freedom. This paper concludes by highlighting the possibility of future friendship between the British and the Indians.

Research paper thumbnail of The Marabar Caves: Their Implications in the Encounter Impasse Between West and East

Basic Education College Magazine For Educational and Humanities Sciences, 2017

Research paper thumbnail of Colonial Aspects in Rudyard Kipling’s Kim

Basic Education College Magazine For Educational and Humanities Sciences, 2017

Log In