The UK Article Directory

Search Articles:
 
Total 1367 Quality Articles Written by 1103 Expert Authors.

Home | FAQ | About Us | Contact Us | Site Map | Exchange Links
The UK Article Directory's
Expert Authors
Home
Browse Articles
Search Articles
Submit/Edit an Article
Get RSS Feeds
Add Free Article Content
Most Viewed
What's Hot
Popular Articles
Latest Articles
Most Emailed
Article Ratings
Free Email Alert
Manage Subscriptions
Authors
Publishers
Contact Us to Advertise
Home | Writing-and-Speaking | Writing | Philip Spires review ...

Philip Spires reviews Arthur and George by Julian Barnes

Submitted by Philip on 2007-08-25 and viewed 92 times.
Total Word Count: 1046
  
Rate This Article | Add Comments | Send To Friends
View Comments (0) | Publisher | Print | Download as PDF

Arthur and George is set in nineteenth century England and deals with issues of social class and racism.

Rising Gas & Electricity prices!


George Edalji (that’s Ay-dal-ji, by the way, since Parsee names are always stressed on the first syllable) is the son of a Staffordshire vicar of Indian origin and his Scottish wife. George is thus a half-caste, to use the language of his late-Victorian and Edwardian age. He’s a diligent, if not too distinguished a scholar. He is uninterested in sport, is of small stature and doesn’t see too well. He sleeps with his father behind a locked door, is in bed by 9:30, becomes a small town solicitor who develops an interest in train timetables and, by way of outlandish diversion, publishes a traveller’s guide to railway law.


 


Arthur Conan Doyle (later Sir Arthur) is born in Edinburgh, completes medical school and generally accomplishes whatever task he sets himself, including becoming a world famous writer. Despite the fact that he kills off his creation, the detective Sherlock Holmes, ostensibly to devote time to tasks of greater gravity, popular demand insists that he raise the character from the dead. He does this and proceeds to generate even greater success than before. He marries happily twice and pursues and interest in spiritualism, amongst other good causes.


 


Perhaps because of who they are, the Edalji family become the butt of the campaign of poison pen letters. When they complain, all they accomplish is the focusing of further unwanted attentions on themselves. When a series of ripping attacks on animals remains unsolved, George, somehow, becomes the prime suspect. Convinced of his villainy, police, judicial system, expert witnesses, jury and press see him convicted of the crime and sent down for seven years. Good conduct sees him released after three.


 


Sir Arthur wishes to do good and takes up George Edalji’s case. He researches the facts, analyses the possibilities, tracks down neighbours and officials who have been involved. He creates an alternative explanation of events and presents it to officialdom, seeking a pardon and compensation for George, who by this time has transferred to London to start a new life. The two men meet and the incongruity of their assumed expectations of life are as irreconcilable as they are irrelevant to their joint focus on George’s case. After official review, however, the Home Office Committee eventually concludes in an ambiguous manner. Edalji was convicted of the crime and the conviction is declared unsound; but crucially he is not declared innocent. He is therefore found not guilty but then not innocent either and so not worthy of compensation. When, years later, Sir Arthur dies and his associates stage a spiritualist gathering in his honour in the Royal Albert Hall, George is invited and attends, complete with binoculars lest he miss a detail of the proceedings. The illusion of the event draws him in and at one stage he feels himself to be the centre of attention, only to find that it is a near miss. Most of the detail refers to himself and his father, but the reality then points to another who is immediately identified.


 


But, paradoxically, the quiet George Edalji and his Parsee (not Hindoo) father, Shapurji, were always the centre of attention simply by being who they were. Even Sir Arthur, the son’s eventual champion, states this in one of his letters when he writes that it was perhaps inevitable that a dark-skinned clergyman taking a station in central England would attracts other’s attention of a kind that would seek to undermine him, vilify him and attempt to oust him. The message is clear, that to be different from an assumed norm is to invite hatred, envy, discrimination and eventually ignominy. It is presented as a universal assumption, an unwritten element of universal common sense. Thus, as an intruder, the usual rules of justice will never pertain, a reality alluded to late in the book when George, scanning the Albert Memorial with his binoculars, discovers a statuesque embodiment of the concept of justice that is not wearing a blindfold.


 


What is eventually so disturbing about Arthur and George, however, is the realisation that both characters are outsiders. George is set apart from his Staffordshire peers by his skin colour and perceived race. Arthur, however, lives no humdrum life. He attends private schools, qualifies as a doctor and then becomes an international celebrity by virtue of his writing. He takes up minority causes and identifies with them but, despite his obvious separateness from mainstream society, in his case his position is never interpreted as a threat or a handicap, obviously because the separateness of privilege has a different currency from the separateness of even relative poverty.


 


Now an enduring memory of my own school history lessons was a textbook reproduction of a mid-Victorian cartoon of the universal pyramid of creation. It had God at the apex, immediately in touch via the saints with the Empress of India and then, layered beneath in widening courses were the gentry and aristocracy, the members of government and civil service, the professional classes and merchants. The working classes could perhaps temporarily ignore their poverty in the solace offered by knowing that they are a cut above members of all other races who, themselves, were just one up from the apes. It was not many more layers down to the low animals, most of which slithered or crawled. Arthur and George ostensibly tells us much about racism and racial discrimination in a society that was portrayed as the apex of a worldwide empire, a heavenly focus for aspiration. It also tells us about the power of presumption and has much to say very quietly and by suggestion about social class and its ability, especially in Britain, to legitimise difference as originality or eccentricity in some areas, differences which elsewhere would be threats.


Article Source: http://www.theukarticledirectory.co.uk

Philip Spires has lived in UK, Kenya, Brunei and UAE. Since 2003, he has lived in Spain, completing a PhD and his first published novel, Mission. http://www.philipspires.co.uk


Don't gamble on energy prices
  • Hot Air Ballooning
  • The History of the Tyre
  • Poisoned Petals by Andy Crabb
  • Neath Swansea Ospreys A New Era
  • Home-made Christmas Card Tree
  • Key Points To Consider When Choosing Your Dissertation Title
  • Planning Your Law Dissertation And Making it Possible!
  • The Important Parts Of Dissertation Proposal
  • How to Do Dissertation Proposal Writing!
  • Its All About Dissertation Introduction
  • The Six Guidelines For Dissertation Literature Review
  • Dissertation Writing Guide!
  • Dissertation Literature Review
  • Dissertation Writing Plan That Actually works.
  • Editing Your Dissertation And Making It Perfect!
  • Dissertation Writing Action Plan
  • Choosing Ph.D. dissertation topic
  • Dissertation abstract writing And Points To Remember!
  • DISSERTATION – CLASSICAL STRUCTURE
  • Choosing the Dissertation Topic For Phd Dissertation
  • Choosing The Topic For Your Dissertation!
  • Choosing a dissertation topic
  • Sure Ways To Get Your Dissertation Done!
  • The Structure of A Dissertation !
  • 10 Points To Help You In Your Dissertation Writing!
  • Dissertation Writing – The Rules To Follow!
  • Dissertation Methodology Chapter!
  • 13 Points To Help You In Formatting Your Dissertation
  • The Body Snatchers
  • How To Organise Your Writing Work
  • Online diamond engagement rings: Convenient way to buy perfect piece
  • Buying diamond engagement ring is now easy
  • Builders and tradesmen - Avoiding problem tradesmen for your home project.
  • The Heather Blazing by Colm Toibin
  • The Father’s Day Gift Dilemma
  • July’s People by Nadine Gordimer
  • Emperor by Colin Thubron
  • PPI Payment Protection Insurance: Another Scandal In The Financial Services Industry.
  • Blog hosting on WordPress.
  • A review of A Bucket of Ashes, a romantic novel set in Britain and Nigeria, by Jill Lanchbery
  • A review of The Valkyries by Paulo Coelho
  • A review of The Possession Legacy by Trevor Dalton
  • Something of a disappointment - Half of a Yellow Sun by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
  • A review of The Black Book by Orhan Pamuk
  • A review of Black Snow by Mikhail Bulgakov
  • Mobile phone UK: Breaking new ground
  • Mobile phone deals: Reap the benefits
  • Philip Spires reviews Breathing Lessons by Anne Tyler
  • Mobile phones: Add color to your personality
  • The next Big Thing - Mobile Networking
  • Facebook opens profiles to the public!
  • Google - the master of Easter Eggs
  • What you need to know about Podcasts
  • A reflection on Saville by David Storey and a bit of Rugby League
  • Citizendium, the rival twin of wikipedia
  • Restless by William Boyd, a review by Philip Spires
  • Mission - Some extracts from the novel
  • Reflections on a pair of novels, Losing Nelson and England, England plus a couple of trips to Chester
  • Google reveals advertising strategy for YouTube
  • Knowledge is power! - The Power of Search Engines?
  • The Sky is not the limit for google
  • Facebook's chamber of secrets has been opened
  • Google is now attacking the media industry
  • How to assemble flat pack furniture the professional way!
  • Search Engine Optimisation - The pitfalls!
  • Website optimisation is not enough!
  • Feed your Search Engine Optimization Campaign with RSS
  • ChaCha.com: The future of search engines?
  • Next Generation mobile phone - THE iPhone
  • What Important Feature Is Missing From Your Headlines?
  • How to Write an Effective Design Brief
  •  
     
    Number of Ratings: 0
    Rating: 0

    Please login here.
    Email:
    Password:
    Name:
    Email:
    Password:
    Comments: