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Analysis Of The Giver By Lois Lowry

Decent Essays

The Giver by Lois Lowry is a powerful novel about growing up, memories, and the contrast of pain vs. pleasure. In this essay, we’ll look at that contrast and examine how without any pain, there can be no pleasure. With no memory or knowledge of pain or true pleasure they live in melancholy monotony. This theory is supported by a quote from chapter four, when Jonas is in the House of the Old’s bathing room; “He liked the feeling of safety here in this warm and quiet room; he liked the expression on the woman’s face… unprotected, exposed” (Lowry, 39). This quote shows how the citizens of Jonas’ community are blissfully ignorant, versus Jonas, who has memory of all the suffering that came before him. This is also sharpened by something the Chief Elder says at the Ceremony of Twelve, “You will be faced now with a pain of a magnitude that none of us here can comprehend, because it is beyond our experience” (Lowry, 79). This sustains the thesis because it restates how unaware the community is. No matter how superb an experience is, the community can never appreciate it to its full extent, because they have no contrast to the negative experiences possible. Later in the book Jonas demonstrates this with a quote; “Jonas did not want to go back. He did not want the wisdom, he did not want the pain. He wanted his childhood again. He wanted his scraped knees and ball games” (Lowry, 121). This shows how he could not fully value his life before he began his training and gained

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