Dylan Winthers
Dr. Kaustav Mukherjee
ENGL 212
9 February 2014
Society Forces the
Ideology of Borders upon Us
Borders dissect every
map into varying areas which society labels territories, countries, nations,
and other districts. Maps portray these districts and educators teach students
that they are a part of a single perhaps couple of the districts. This is
false. Unfortunately, individuals are born into this notion and will raise
their children with the same. Society forces borders upon individuals based on
an ideology that a single individual cannot belong to the entirety of the
world, but only to a specific and localized space. The labeled regions force
difference upon otherwise equal people, which has continually initiated tragedy
over time.
A literary analysis of
a 1955 short story, Toba Tek Singh by Saadat Hasan Manto agrees, borders
and countries are perspective. To summarize from the story:
There he stood in no man’s land on his swollen legs
like a colossus… no further attempt was made to push into India. He was allowed
to stand were he wanted… on one side, lay India and on the other side, Pakistan…
on a bit of earth which had no name.
Saadat Hasan Manto captures a moment
when a prisoner is being transferred between India and Pakistan. The prisoner
recognizes that at that very moment, he is not associated with either India or
Pakistan, and is therefore free. This feeling of freedom that Manto captures, suggests
the boundaries and borders individuals adhere by are imprisoning. This inescapable ideology which delegates a region to any location, instigated thousands of wars,
starting with territory fights between uncivilized humans to the Civil War and
more.
The
borders used by this ideology mean to prevent chaos by adding order, in terms
of recognition of space and land. While order holds societies together, true
freedom would allow anyone to move as they please across land without
consequence at a border. South Dakotans, for example, are not able to travel
too far north without encountering a Canadian border patrol unit. Strangely
enough, affiliation with a particular region jeopardizes one legitimacy when
located in a different region. Meaning, someone from the Middle East is
instantly affiliated with the pop-culture and its media oriented negativity, in
the eyes of many Americans, solely because of the region from which they hale. Understandably,
the negativity does not come from the land but the actions of the few, however
the region, which is labeled by borders, often consists of an assembly of
similar beings.
Literary
analysis of Manto’s Toba Tek Singh represents a captured feeling of freedom
from a forced and mandatory ideology that a single individual cannot belong to
the entirety of the world but only to a specific region. This labeling of
borders and regions, while organizing, causes disgust between regions just
because of differentiating labels. Although individuals are born into this
notion, seeking freedom from borders and understanding equality is a conception
that is border-less.
494 word count.