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The British Empire as a Family in W. Somerset Maugham’s “The Force of Circumstance”
Author(s) -
Krzysztof Kosecki
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
forum for contemporary issues and literature
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2719-8111
pISSN - 2391-9426
DOI - 10.34739/fci.2020.01.04
Subject(s) - hero , empire , ideology , wife , metaphor , context (archaeology) , narrative , poetics , british empire , colonialism , history , literature , sociology , gender studies , genealogy , law , art , ancient history , philosophy , politics , poetry , political science , linguistics , archaeology
Set in the context of early 20 th century Malaya, W. Somerset Maugham’s (1874–1965)short story “The Force of Circumstance” (1926) concisely represents the conflictingattitudes to sex and family life among the British colonial employees. The narrative,which develops around the main hero Guy’s relationships with his English wife Dorisand an unnamed Malay concubine, reflects a contrast between the attitudes to sexdominant in the official imperial ideology of that time and the practice in the colonies.The frameworks of narratology and Cognitive Poetics make it possible to read thecomplicated situation of the main hero as an extended metaphor of the British Empire, inwhich formal and informal family relations map onto the relations between Great Britainand the dependent states. Though the British imperial ideology used the concept offamily to strengthen the relations between the metropole and the colonies, Maugham’sstory represents the Empire as a not-so-happy family – a result of circumstances ratherthan of mutual bond and consent.

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