Author
Abstract
In E. M. Forster's seminal novel Howards End, the character of Leonard Bast is universally considered as a tragic representative of the marginalized lower class. However, the intricate relationship between his metaphorically "disabled" body and the overarching forces of imperial hegemony has not been fully explored in contemporary literary criticism. To address this critical gap, this paper draws extensively on postcolonial theory, particularly utilizing Homi Bhabha's foundational concept of mimicry, alongside the social model of disability studies, to comprehensively reinterpret Leonard's portrayal as a multifaceted victim of systemic power dynamics. It argues that Leonard's "disabled" body is systematically shaped and ultimately destroyed by three distinct forms of institutional oppression. First, imperial economic exploitation relentlessly reduces his physical body to mere expendable material, stripping him of fundamental human agency. Second, imperial cultural regulation gradually undermines his psychological subjectivity and authentic selfhood through the enforced mechanisms of cultural mimicry. Finally, as both his economic utility and cultural identity inevitably collapse under these dual pressures, the imperial society ruthlessly eliminates him as a completely superfluous body. By meticulously tracing this trajectory of exploitation, regulation, and elimination, the paper uncovers a profound, implicit anti-imperialist narrative embedded within Howards End. Ultimately, this research offers a compelling new perspective on applying postcolonial theory to analyze domestic class structures, demonstrating how imperial ideologies permeate and destructively govern the vulnerable bodies within the imperial metropole itself.
Suggested Citation
Li, Qiulin, 2026.
"Exploitation, Regulation, and Elimination: The Writing of the Disabled Body Under Imperial Oppression in Howards End,"
International Journal of Literature, Linguistics, and Cultural Studies, Pinnacle Academic Press, vol. 2(1), pages 33-39.
Handle:
RePEc:dba:ijllcs:v:2:y:2026:i:1:p:33-39
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