A Clockwork Orange Free Will Essay

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    Listen closely, my fellow devotchkas and malchicks, to the tale of Your Most Humble Narrator, Alex. The story of a Nadsat thug who was unjustly stripped of his freedom and moral choice by the government. You could all end up just like me, a mechanical organism, forced to behave through torture. I was once the leader of my own gang, with my droogs by the names of Dim, Georgie and Pete. I never treated them well, so they betrayed me and left me for the cops after a failed break-in on a baboochka’s

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    Mr. Stendahl had left Earth to escape the book burnings, but he decides that he will not run anymore, and makes his last stand towards oppression with his house that defies the government’s policies on free-expression. Inside the house, he takes his favorite parts from Poe’s stories, and creates a labyrinth of death traps based off of the ways people died in the books. He invites all those that would see his house destroyed, the people responsible for

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    Bromden is another victim of ECT. He receives more than two hundred ECT, which damages his brain and his body. Harding describes ECT humorously that, “it is quite simple, quick and nearly painless […] Those fortunate souls in there are being given a free trip to the moon”(Kesey 107). However, the results of ECT are more than that. The serious effects are too serious because it damages the

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    Totalitarian governments, by their very nature demand control over the people, encompassing all aspects of their lives, and through the use of surveillance, this control is maintained. Through the works of Anthony Burgess in A Clockwork Orange, Tom Rob Smith in Child 44, and George Orwell in 1984, these authors take a closer look into the necessity of surveillance in the survival of any totalitarian government. To begin with, the motivation for using surveillance over the people stems from the concept

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    A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess takes up many themes throughout the novel. It is known for its candor with violence and its expressive nature regarding it. The novel is narrated by Alex, a fifteen-year-old boy, who tells the story of his ultra-violent acts and journey through reformation by the state. Alex belongs to a violent subculture created by teenagers and lurks the night with his droogs (gang members) in effort to rape, steal, assault, and abuse drugs. In the novel, Burgess argues that

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    was created by a Brunnen native, Ugo Rondinone. Miami Mountain is a 42 feet tall, loud colored sculpture that has great geological configurations and obscure structures. What caught my eye about this piece was its bubbly blue, lime green, electric orange, and hot pink tones. The vibrant colors really brought out the kid in me. The most intriguing part of this piece the stone stacking. Knowing that the art of stone stacking has been around for thousands of years, allowed me to further my appreciation

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    and then had thoughts about getting married and his future kid. A Clockwork Orange was written in 1962 by Anthony Burgess. Anthony Burgess liked music, specifically classic which was also an interest of Alex’s. His mom and sister died when he was a baby. He served for the military during World War 2. (Aggeler par.6) Burgess was influenced by Russian gangs in 1961. (Pearson par.8) Burgess thought it was important to have a free will, make their own decision and moral choice. As in the story,

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    interesting point of, “Is a man who chooses the bad perhaps in some way better than a man who has the good imposed upon him?” (Burgess 106). A Clockwork Orange reflects upon a story of a delinquent in a dystopian society whose free will is taken away and has goodness forced upon him. We're forced to be provoked with questions such as, is this better for society? How does free will affect humanity? Is it better to have goodness or have the choice of goodness? Alex is part of an experiment that helps us answer

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    In A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess, Alex, the protagonist is a fifteen-year-old boy who commits ultra-violent acts out of pure pleasure. The allegory present throughout the novel shows that Alex is ruthless and does not feel pain when experiencing the deaths of others. Throughout the journey of a small portion of Alex’s life, vivid representations of settings are used to portray the dark deeds done by Alex and his friends. Burgess also uses distinct dialect to individualize Alex and his friends

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    growth and capable of sweetness, to ooze juicily at the last round the bearded lips of God, to attempt to impose, I say, laws and conditions appropriate to a mechanical creation, against this I raise my sword-pen,” Anthony Burgess in his novel ‘A Clockwork Orange’, which happens to be a scathing critique of totalitarian government, through the character of F. Alexander. Burgess is attempting to criticize the type of governments that try to limit the freedom of an individual through science and technology

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