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Gotmilk Posted 17 years ago
Grammar

The Man Who Would Be King by Kipling

Hey guys,

I'm reading a part of Kipling's The Man Who Would be King.

I was wonderining if any racism is showed. I mean I see them as taking over the kingdom and think India is not suitable to run on its own and stuff. But is there any other racism showed? I can't seem to find it for some reason, maybe its more in depth or something?

Thanks
  

Top answer

There's racism and then there's racism. Some consider the theme to be the exposure of freemasonry. Like many secret organizations, there's some degree of racism involved.

  • There's racism and then there's racism.
  • Some consider the theme to be the exposure of freemasonry.
  • Like many secret organizations, there's some degree of racism involved.
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1 Answers
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There's racism and then there's racism.

Some consider the theme to be the exposure of freemasonry. Like many secret organizations, there's some degree of racism involved.

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