While the audience waits for their jobs to be announced, the Chief Elder announces: “All your training has been to help you fit in, to curb any impulse that may set you apart from others. For they have determined your future.”(The Giver).To ensure equality and implement control, the Elders of The Communities determine the jobs of the citizens. Therefore, they are are certain that the jobs given to the citizens occupy up their time, giving no room for creativity or individuality. In Orwell’s 1984 Winston lies down and thinks about the telescreens: “He thought of the telescreen with its never-sleeping ear. They could spy upon you night and day…”(166). Telescreens are installed around Oceania to imply the message that the citizens and being watched and the Inner Party has dominant power over them. Therefore, the citizens fear them because they do not want to be vaporized by the Inner Party. In Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451, Mildred bothers Montag so he says: "’Will you turn the parlour off?’ he asked. ‘That's my family’"(25). The government issues parlors in the form of propaganda and censorship. Since the citizens listen and accept anything the parlor states, they are being brainwashed from the government. By using these tactics to implement control, the governments are creating dystopia instead of
While the audience waits for their jobs to be announced, the Chief Elder announces: “All your training has been to help you fit in, to curb any impulse that may set you apart from others. For they have determined your future.”(The Giver).To ensure equality and implement control, the Elders of The Communities determine the jobs of the citizens. Therefore, they are are certain that the jobs given to the citizens occupy up their time, giving no room for creativity or individuality. In Orwell’s 1984 Winston lies down and thinks about the telescreens: “He thought of the telescreen with its never-sleeping ear. They could spy upon you night and day…”(166). Telescreens are installed around Oceania to imply the message that the citizens and being watched and the Inner Party has dominant power over them. Therefore, the citizens fear them because they do not want to be vaporized by the Inner Party. In Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451, Mildred bothers Montag so he says: "’Will you turn the parlour off?’ he asked. ‘That's my family’"(25). The government issues parlors in the form of propaganda and censorship. Since the citizens listen and accept anything the parlor states, they are being brainwashed from the government. By using these tactics to implement control, the governments are creating dystopia instead of