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Harrison Bergeron Analysis Essay

Decent Essays

Yoscairy Raymond
Professor Pendergast
English 112

Harrison Bergeron by: Kurt Vonnegut
Literary Analysis Essay

By what means can someone achieve true equality, other than putting aside hatred. Strict governmental control? Will hiding a person’s real identity, abolish the envy and irrational hatred? Kurt Vonnegut illustrates the individuality of each person, and the lack of equality within society. Vonnegut using symbolism, irony, and simile, describes his view of the government to be dysfunctional and ineffective in his story, “Harrison Bergeron”.

Due to George Bergeron’s remarkable intelligence, his thoughts were constantly interrupted by an earpiece he was forced to wear. This earpiece was designed to send out a sound every twenty seconds that would interrupt and scramble his thoughts. At the moment of this sound going off in his head, his “thoughts fled in panic, like bandits from a burglar alarm.” This device incapacitates him from making a complete thought or having the ability to focus on a subject for a prolonged period of time. The author also uses this same handicap to illustrate how frustrating it is to have, as the alarm repeatedly interrupts the story. It is quite ironic of the author to include how Hazel finds it so interesting and intriguing to hear all the sounds, when really George is only hearing …show more content…

The author calls them “short bursts”, when Hazel thinks of anything throughout the story, as she cannot retain anything, not even the live broadcasting of her son’s death. “There were tears on Hazel's cheeks, but she'd forgotten for the moment what they were about.” This statement made by the author, shows that the futuristic meaning of “equality” will mean the negligence of society within itself. And that “average” intelligence merely being the obscurity people and their

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