This mostly deals with the interactions between Flory with Elizabeth and a Burmese woman Ma Hla May. Sexual boundaries displayed in this novel are reproduced throughout the novel between character interactions. The members of this group sit around in the club and drink and belittle women and the Burmese. This club is exclusive to only white Europeans. The European Club consists of all white Europeans resembling a current day country club. The exclusivity of the European Club signifies the social structure throughout the book. The theme of racial boundary in Burmese Days extends also to social and sexual boundaries as well. She is an Englishwomen, a niece of the colonialist, comes to Burma to stay with her aunt and uncle. Elizabeth often refers them to as “beastly”. These non-whites are considered second nature to the Europeans and hold such titles and jobs as peasants and servants. The non-white Burmese people constituted the rest. The top tier being the white European elite, while the bottom tier seems to be the rest. The social class system in this novel seems to be a two-tier system. The white Europeans are extremely racist, sexist, and self centered. It is evident throughout George Orwell’s novel, Burmese Days, that the main theme is the superiority of the white Europeans over the non-white Burmese. The British colonization of Burma created a racial boundary that had the Burmese dealing with white European supremacy since day one.
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