The Giver is unrealistic book and the society is fating all the dystopian topics in many ways. The book is fitting the characteristics of a dystopian society and the dystopian protagonist. The Giver are fating in the dystopian society for many reasons because the people was fearing the outside world and they don’t have their own freedom and well. The people that controlling the society is the people that controlling their freedom and making them have a fair from the outside world. The people in the society have fair from the outside world because people talked about the release. People was scared to say the word release: “He was needless to say, HE WILL BE RELEASED,”(Lowry 2). The man was scared to say the world “Release” because
The Giver is a dystopia because they have release. According to document C it reads “This morning we celebrated the release of Roberto,” she told him.” This quote shows that The Giver is a dystopia because it says that they celebrated a release. It shows that they released/ killed an old person. According to document D“To his surprise, his father began very carefully
The Giver is written from Jonas’s confusion, excitement, glory, and discoveries. Jonas is a twelve-year-old boy living in a futuristic civilization that has eliminated all pain, fear, love, and free will. There is no chauvinism, since everyone looks and acts basically the same, and there are no “important” choices to be made, also, everyone is consistently polite. The “perfect” society Jonas lives in has also abolished choice: At age twelve every member of the community is assigned a job based on his or her abilities and interests. Citizens can apply for compatible spouses, who are assigned to them based on interests and jobs and each couple is allowed to receive exactly two children each. (Notice that I said receive, not give birth to.) In addition to that, spouses don’t show any signs of love or affection, just the word love, even when pointed at their children, makes them burst in laughter and explanations! Citizens who break rules or fail to adapt properly to the society’s codes of behavior are “released”. Everything is planned and organized so that life is as convenient and pleasant as possible, or so they think.
The Giver is a 2014 film directed by Phillip Noyce. The film is solely based on a novel with the same name by Lois Lowry. It talks about a teen, Jonas, living in a society where none of them is different. Each individual in their society is equal. Labels like popular, losers, winners, and as such does not exist within their society. They have created the new definition of fairness.
The Giver describes a society in search of perfection, which is a recurring theme in literature. Somebody in Jonas’s society decided that eliminating or limiting choices and feeling, among other things, would ultimately create a perfect place in which to live. By eliminating and/or limiting choices and feelings, the creators were able to implement Sameness, which would then provide a conflict-less environment in which to exist.
The Giver, by Lois Lowry, is an amazing book. It presents a society that tries to create a perfect world of harmony and peace. Unfortunately, individuality is lost from the people and their emotions are restricted. They are all living in a world of ignorance created by the author and continue to do so willingly. In doing so, Lois Lowry portrays a dystopian world, instead of a perfect one, by creating a society where individuality is lost and emotions are not important. Some people think this world is perfect and could work in modern life, while others can clearly see how this is nothing but a controlling dystopia that would ultimately fail.
The final reason that I think the Giver portrays a dystopian society is their method of release. They may think that they’re sorting out good and bad, but what do they know? If they don’t know anything about love, why should they know about pain, suffering, death, and war? Everyone outside of the releasing room thought their dear friend was going Elsewhere… but the people inside that horrid room witnessed, or committed, the murder of innocents. There were no such things as identical twins; the lighter one would be killed. The people had no perception of death, for all they know that little baby, which just happened to be 3 ounces lighter than his brother, could really be going Elsewhere. Even if they’re traveling there through a garbage chute. Not only children were released though, as Jonas’ mother tells them it can happen to the middle aged too, “‘You know that there’s no third chance. The rules say that if there’s a third transgression, he simply has to be released.’” (pg.9). Some people were so ignorant on the subject that they used the word as a joke, like the speaker when the pilot flew over the town, “NEEDLESS TO SAY, HE WILL BE RELEASED, the voice had said, followed by silence. There was an ironic tone to that final message, as if the Speaker found it amusing…” (pg.2). Who wants to
The Giver by Louis Lowry is an exceptional book that is indeed science fiction, which fits in the genre of modern fantasy. According to Tunnell and Jacobs, “Science fiction differs from fantasy not in subject matter but in aim, and its unique aim is to suggest real hypotheses about mankind’s future or about the nature of the universe…Science fiction also concerns the way in which scientific possibilities might affect societies of human or alien beings or both. Therefore, it is sometime called futuristic fiction” (2016, p.129). The Giver fits in this futuristic fiction category, because there is a dystopia society that is very different from the society that we live in today. The society that Jonas the main character in the story lives in has many rules that are not used in our society. Such that the government chooses the types of job you will have at the age of twelve, no one in your community has the same name; color and music are not visual or known in this society. There is a push that everyone is the same, which was
The novel, The Giver, is a utopian/dystopian fiction written by Lois Lowry. The main character, Jonas, lives in a perfect world. There is no war, fear or pain. By comparing and contrasting two seemingly different societies, one can determine that a utopian society cannot truly exist. While there are many similarities and differences within The Giver and modern society, some that stood out were the lifestyle, memories, and families.
My first reason on why I think the giver is a dystopia because they don’t get to choose their jobs. They have ceremony every year and when you turn twelve they get assigned a job. People will get assigned a job that they might not like, but there is a chance that they could get a job they like. For example on page 60“ in a firm, commanding voice she announced, ‘Jonas has been selected to be our next Receiver Of Memory”. Jonas was nervous at first about his job because the chief elder has described his job as painful and that the pain was “ indescribable.” Later he then just wants to be a regular child instead of being the Reciever.
The book The Giver portrays a society that is perfect in every way, but the deeper into the book the more the author portrays that it is far from perfect. There are many immoral events that take place in this book and at first it can be deceiving to the reader because it seems like such a perfect community, even at the beginning of the book it seemed like it was a great system and it would work well in today's society. The further into the book, the more it explains the meaning of release and the main character realizes how morally wrong it is.
The Giver represents a life that may seem unrealistic to many who do not believe such policies exist today. Society pays little attention to what is presented as unrealistic policies, which are in actuality are active. The policies shown in The Giver are better described as governmental and social policies consisting of drug abuse, death penalty arranged marriage and euthanasia. It may seem as though these topics are rare in the real world but they do exist.
The giver community is a dystopia. I know this because when you compare the giver community to our world it takes a minute but I guarantee it is a dystopia, you can see this because on the out side looking in, you know all of the secrets that make up the giver community. another reason it is a dystopia is because when people imagine a perfect world it is not anything like the community of the giver, lastly is the fact that the government plans out people’s lives. I will go into detail and make many other points in this essay about both sides of this question.
If Society were to choose things for the world to be perfect the world might actually be perfect in a way. The story The Giver by Lois Lowry is a dystopian novel about a boy named Jonas and his community. The story is about Jonas becoming the receiver of memory which means he gets ever memory of everyone who ever lived. In the community everyone except Jonas and The Giver does not have their memories. If our society did that today it would be perfect. If society chose how things worked then everyone would be the similar and there would be no differences. Society would make it so no one could see color, no choosing spouses, no pets, no love, certain words would be banished, smell would be gone, weapons, you would have to take medication,
The community in The Giver is an example of a dystopian society. The world don't have choices, no color or music and felling. This world is the safety world, isn't a freedom world. However, safety is not the best.
Have you ever wondered what it would be like living in a world in which everyone is governed? A world where there are rules for everything and penalties for breaking those rules? Where there is no pain, love nor hate, no color and everyone is equal? Or how about if you were given the opportunity to choose living in which everything is just unpleasant and all the undesirable things conceivable are present. What would your choice be?