Jonas is the main character in The Giver by Lois Lowry. In Jonas’s community it’s natural to be doing everything the loudspeaker says, it is the way to surrvive. Only Jonas and the Giver can see in color. Everyone in Jonas’s community thinks it is natrual that the leaders can listen to every conversation. All adults have to apply for a spouse and children. Which means you get assigned to a family unit. Not very many people are even aware there is much life outside of the community because it is so closed. But, most of all no one even knows that when someone is to be released it means you are killed with euthanasia, except for Jonas and the Giver. No one even knows of the concept of death.…
The Giver is a book about a totalitarian government that controls its people by outlawing colors, pets and many things we take for granted today. In the dystopian society of “The Giver”, there are many differences from our modern society, some being the age system, the “family units”, and the economy and employment…
Jonas, with help from the Giver, decides to make a plan to bring memories back into the community. Jonas breaks the rules, and leaves for elsewhere after having enough of the way it is. In the novel, it says “the community has depended… on a resident receiver to hold their memories for them (Lowry 155).” Jonas is tired of the giver and himself having to hold the memories of everyone in the community. Jonas wants others to feel, see, and hear what he does.…
Imagine a word with no love, no affection, and no biological families. Well in the dystopian society in The Giver by Lois Lowry. This is their everyday life, which makes the protagonist Jonas wonder why is this the case. Jonas’ society and modern day society have close to nothing in common. While Jonas’ society is emotionless, experiences sameness, and does not have choices, Modern day society consists of love, celebrates individuality, and has freedom to choose.…
Ever wonder what it would be if there were community’s where rules have to be followed or we get released or killed. Jonas knows then rebels against all of the rules and leaves the community with a little kid that was going to get released. The main character, Jonas, changes when he stops following the rules and starts receiving memories in the book The Giver by: Lois Lowlry.…
Would you ever live in a world without memories? “The Giver”, a provocative novel by Louis Lowery is about a boy named Jonas, who lives in a world where everything is in order and to perfection. From sunrise to sundown everything is in order and running smoothly. Even though this sounds like the perfect place to live, it has a flaw. The one flaw is that memories do not play a major role in lives of the people who live in this community, as they should be. When Jonas gets the assignment of being the next Receiver (the one who holds the memories) he discovers not only this flaw but, the power of it too. He discovers how pain from the memories gives wisdom. Jonas also sees that the community could use the wisdom; therefore he takes the risk of leaving the community.…
The Giver is told from the perspective of a eleven year old boy named Jonas. Jonas lives in a “flawless” futuristic society. The society is free of conflicts, pain, fear, hunger, and hatred. Jonas ultimately uncovers the secretes about the community, making him question his and his communities ignorance. Throughout the book the main character Jonas dramatically changes as do the settings of the book.…
In a world of no differences, a young twelve year old boy named Jonas is chosen to bear the weight of all of humanity's memories. This book takes place sometime in the future when we humans have totally lost everything that makes us, us. Because we were able to figure out a way to erase all emotions and memories from ourselves, we created a place believed to be a utopia. Jonas is just a regular boy living in his community with his mother, father, and sister. On the day of the ceremony of twelves, things change drastically for him. He is chosen to be the next Receiver of Memory. Jonas soon starts his training by being transmitted the world's memories from the Giver, the current Receiver of Memory. He soon learns much about the past and realizes that things aren't perfect in his current world.…
Memories are considered a practical part of existence, and many don’t think of the consequences without them. Feelings would be felt but not known, memories made but not kept. This world is interpreted in The Giver where the citizens that populate the community only know simple concepts like their name, their age, their family. As they grow up to become twelve, a life-long job is assigned to them. Jonas is a citizen chosen to have the most important job in the community; the Receiver of Memory.…
I believe that Jonas’ assignment as the next Receiver of Memory is an honor. It has only a few negatives, but many important and serious positives. I will start with the negatives of this assignment. First of all, he is not allowed to discuss his assignment or his training (even if he did no one would understand him without the memories.) with his friends at school, like everyone else did, nor with his family at home. But what makes this assignment look different and weird to many people, is that they don’t really know what it is to have the memories. There are positive things about this assignment, but no one except the Giver and the Receiver can understand. They have the privilege to see beyond, and by that, receive the memories which show emotions, colors, music, places and weather-changes that don’t exist in their community because of Sameness. Jonas and the Giver are the only people in their community who actually know, with the help of the memories, how awful their community actually is. They know that everyone is pretending, without knowing it. They don’t know what marriage is or how a real and normal family looks like and acts like. And the most important, is that the Giver and the Receiver are the only ones who can change their community, who can change Sameness and make everything like it used to be a really long time ago.…
Memories shape anothers persons life, in all kind of emotions. Sometimes memories bring the the joy in all of us, but it can also be a memory that does not want to be shared. Jonas, in a strange kind of community nothing like our, but has no right to anything at all. Yet, he is chosen to be the giver. The giver transmits memories in Jonas of things he never knew before and not experience, he then finds out the real truth about his community and decides to change it. Emotions express ourselves about how we feel towards events that happen through our lives, but when memories turn unpleasent, Lowry shows in The Giver, emotions can feel painful. The memory is about war which gives an euphemism to Jonas and changes his emotions. When Jonas returns…
In this community, everyone is the same and there are many restrictions. In this story, Jonas was selected to be the Receiver of Memories. The reason Jonas was chosen is that he had the ability to see beyond and he had the traits to become the receiver. As the receiver, Jonas has to keep hold the memories of what the world the world one was. If there is no receiver, the entire community will have to face the painful memories of reality.…
What do you think of a world when you have to follow the same rules as everyone else and some decisions you cannot make on your own? The book "The Giver" is about a world with people who are equal and Jonas, the protagonist, has something that other's in the community don't. The novel "The Giver" is a society that appears to be utopian but is revealed to be dystopia as the story goes on. As a result, it is clear to see that the society in the novel has many similarties and differences with our world today. The world we live in and the world they lived in both are controlled by people.…
The book The Giver is a dystopia. It is a dystopia because you get your bike at 12 years old, they kill small children, and they can’t leave the community.…
The Giver is an example of dystopian literature, because they don’t allow people to make their own choices. Differences were hated so much that they made them only see black and white. The elders don’t know anything about the real world like war or starvation. The elders control the people of the civilizations food rations. The elders live in a community where when you get too old, or if you don’t comfort yourself as an infant, or if you’re the smaller of twins, or if you want to leave then you are released (killed off).…