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'Invasive Nature In Ray Bradbury's The City'

Decent Essays

Humans have always been invasive, in fact it seems to be a key characteristic of humans. As a species, we only care about our own needs, since we have the basic instinct to survive. In Ray Bradbury’s, “The City,” we had caused the death of a civilization and the “City” wanted revenge for its loss. This short story shows humans’ invasive nature as well as their indifference towards those who are perceived as abnormal, this characteristics can be observed throughout history. Our invasive nature is prevalent through much of American history. For example, when the first europeans set foot on this land, it began to cause many problems for the Natives, we wanted what they had, which for the most part was their land, but their were other things as well. However when we came here we also brought many diseases with us that the Native Americans had never encountered before. This resulted in the death of many Native Americans, although unlike “The City,” where everyone had died, only about “ninety percent” (Portero) of the Native Americans had died. This event or series of events supports the idea that humans have an invasive nature and also demonstrates how we are indifferent towards those …show more content…

In “The City” it says that “who kept us in slavery and ruined us and destroyed us with a great disease” (Bradbury 226) This is basically what happened during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries in the United States. We captured and brought countless people from Africa to the United States, since they were needed to “work the land” (“Slavery in the United States”) that we had occupied. However either when they came in contact with a european or started working here, many became ill and died, much like the Native Americans. Slavery demonstrates that we couldn’t have cared less about people, who we considered abnormal, but it also gives another example where we invaded a people and took away their

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