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Themes In Dead Poets Society

Decent Essays

The film Dead Poets Society directed by Peter Weir and the novel Everything, Everything by Nicola Yoon, explore the issues that the protagonists face during their years of adolescent development. The brutal mechanism parental pressures has for great fulfillment in life is superbly portrayed with the utilization of setting, cinematography and irony throughout the film and novel. Thus, as the protagonists tolerate relentless pressures from their parents, it triggers the thoughts of Neil (DPS) and Madeline (EE) to become rebellious, as they realise for the first time that they have aspirations for themselves. Hence the literary techniques of character development and symbolism were exploited in both texts to present the theme of rebellion. Therefore, the aforementioned themes commendably represent the chaos adolescents experience throughout their years of development and the ways it impacts their future. Both Yoon and Weir demonstrate the consequences of parental pressures on a teenager’s development by emphasising the feelings of restriction experienced by the protagonists. However, one explores in an old fashioned society and the other in a modern society. Exploring the purpose of using the setting of a private school, depicts the director’s intention to showcase tradition and discipline of the film’s general setting. In contrast to Yoon’s utilisation of a sterilised, modern home that emphasises cleanliness and order, because “If [Madeline’s] life were a book and you read

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