Transformation of Colonialism in Madama Research Paper

Total Length: 2310 words ( 8 double-spaced pages)

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In the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries most of the major European powers were part of this colonial grab for power and territory; and after the American Civil War, so was the United States. Almost immediately this translated into an East/West schism in which both sides harbored bias about each other, never really understanding the motivations of each other's actions. This is the world in which Pinkerton arrives -- a Nagasaki that has barely opened its doors to the West, but sees Western naivete and cultural values such that it is easy to manipulate them for money. In the case of the French, their long history of conflict in Indochina was seen by the Chinese as a perfect example of the Marxian view of the oppressed. Songs masters thought nothing of using her to glean information as well as disseminate disinformation. After all, Song was two things despised by the current Chinese government: an artist and a homosexual. She was disposable, and only useful to a point. Goro sees Cio-Cio-San as a commodity and has found Prince Yamadori, a wealthy Japanese noble who is somehow entranced by this Americanized Geisha.

And then we have the matter of love; Cio-Cio-San does not "love" Pinkerton in the modern sense; for she does not know him. He is a symbol -- a way for a young and naive girl to recapture respectability, and she certainly believes the stories of romantic love and gives herself to him. Suzuki is clearly devoted and loves Cio-Cio-San; Pinkerton, we are not certain, is capable of love, even with Kate, his American wife. He seems to be doing the proper things expected of him as an Officer, but certainly not out of any internal morality.

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This, however, does not seem to be the case with Song and Gallimard -- what began as an obsession, an itch if you will, turns into love, at least on some level -- two decades is more than a sexual dalliance. Yet, two things puzzle the audience: how could Gallimard not know Song was a man, even with the lights off, and if he truly loved Song, why would that matter in the end?

Finally, it is in the finale of both works that we find the pathos of similarity. Both Gallimard and Cio-Cio-San must decide to live with dishonor or die with what semblance of honor they can elicit. This, for both characters, oddly juxtaposed, is their final act of power -- and both die for love, albeit love unrequited. Song utters the same words as Pinkerton -- "Butterfly, Butterfly," and both live. Pinkerton will forever be shamed when he looks at his son and realizes his shameful treatment of Cio-Cio-San; Song lives, likely proof that the world is empty without what turned out to be the love of her life......

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"Transformation Of Colonialism In Madama" 27 April 2010. Web.27 June. 2025. <
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"Transformation Of Colonialism In Madama", 27 April 2010, Accessed.27 June. 2025,
https://www.aceyourpaper.com/essays/transformation-colonialism-madama-2340