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Sample Paper
Words 1,760
In 1933, Andre Malraux published Man’s Fate, a scholarly novel set against the background of the 1927 communist insurrection in Shanghai. André Malraux has pushed to its intense consequences that modern pragmatic impulse which tends to see in the world of action the only reality, and, what is more, to reject any proposition which cannot be interpret into a force, an act or a series of deeds. In this paper I argue that Malraux is very realistic in his portrayal of the revolution and he has tried to remain as impartial as he possibly can in this paper.
The Chinese revolution, mainly the revolution of 1925-27, is one of the greatest events in history. Here was a people kept practically at the level of pack animals, the most despised elements as far as imperialism was fretful, who did the work of beasts, and were considered very often to be of less value than beasts. Yet it was these people who stepped onto the scenes of history in a splendid movement between 1925 and 1927, which if successful would have changed China and saved the Chinese people the agonies of the following 22 years. It would in turn have altered the whole face of the world. World history would have taken a completely different course. (Taaffe 1980)