A sociological approach to self and identity begins with the assumption that there is a reciprocal relationship between the self and society (Stryker, 1980). The self has an influence upon society via the actions of the individuals, consequently creating groups, organizations, networks, and institutions. Reciprocally, society has influence upon the self via its common language and meanings which enables a person to engage in a social interaction, and to assume the role of the other. Identity is determined by the relationship between the self and the other and it is through this sense of identity that we identify ourselves as members of various ethnic groups as well as social classes providing us with a sense of belonging. Nations, in their …show more content…
The characters are all exiles from their homeland who have gathered together at the Villa San Girolamo at the end of World War II. The English Patient seeks to explore and analyze the problem of identity, experienced both by the colonizer and the colonized. The novel’s central figure is the English patient whose identity is already erased as he is burnt beyond recognition. The English Patient is in fact the Hungarian Count Almasy, a desert explorer who helped the Germans navigate the deserts. Although his duty is to name the unmapped desert, in the end his own identity, which is the map of his own features, has been erased and he is known only as the ‘English patient’. Since the novel questions colonial and anti-colonial nationalism, which shape their identities, it frequently breaks down colonial hierarchies, particularly the imperial conception of space through the mapping of the desert, and the desert’s elusiveness because of its vastness and uncontrollable sand storms. In fact, mapping a space means to name it and possess it as it becomes a place as seized territory, which will help invaders, explorers and traders to realize their plans and …show more content…
When reaching the end of the novel one can observe that these characters feel they had changed. They feel that they are no more the men they used to be. Phillip begins to have a feeling of no more being an Englishman, but still not being an American. The fact that he lives in a different society has influenced him so much that he has almost forgotten his British roots. In one of the letters to his wife Hillary he realizes his change and confesses it. He is no more the man he used to be. But his change seems to be convenient to him because he does not regret