People who have viewed both The Giver and The Truman Show have definitely made some comparisons. Firstly, neither of the two had given their consent before being chosen for their specific role. In the book, “The Giver,” Jonas is picked by the elders to fill in…
There are many differences in the movie and the story. For example, the main characters. In the movie the main character is Melanie Daniels. But in the story, the main character is Nat. The settings are also different. In the…
The novel The Giver has a main character Jonas becomes braver and develops the feeling of love and those changes help him a…
Have you ever thought of having a world with no pain, loneliness, or love? Well in the book The Giver, by Lois Lowry Jonas never thought of a world with it. His world was perfect. Until the day he turned twelve. Jonas had been given a job to work with The Giver. All is well until JOnas has to have the things in life he never knew of, even though those emotions are why Jonas has become the person he did at the end of the book. The GIver shows how valuable emotions like pain, loneliness, and love can change a person.…
In The Giver, almost all signs of human bonds are removed; love is classified as dangerous, friendships are believed to lead to war, and falling in love is thought to cause heartbreak and chaos. Human bonds mean nothing to the people of the community. " 'Your father means that you've used a very generalized word, so meaningless that it's become almost obsolete' " (160). Jonas's mother speaks of love in this quote during a conversation with Jonas and his father. In order to create a friendship or fall in love, one must find things both common and different with another. This is nearly impossible without speaking of each other's past. Love is non-existent in The Giver because when the creators removed the sharing of memories, there was no way to keep friendship and human bonds. Sharing memories allow for connections to be made, and without that, love cannot…
Movies that portray the transformation of gender for love often gets criticized a lot by the people of various sexual orientations.…
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.…
The American writer, Lois Lowry in her novel, The Giver, claims that in creating a utopian society the creator manufactures a dystopia, since the individuality of a person contradicts the creator’s idea of a utopia. She develops her claim by first creating a utopia where the residents lack individuality conforming to the criteria of sameness, then presenting the absence of intense emotions, then convey the reader’s thoughts of the utopia by placing a main character who gains his emotions and individuality, and finally declares that the utopia lacks morality spawning a dystopia. Lowry’s purpose is to criticize conformity in order to state that to enjoy life one must suffer to appreciate life. She establishes a thoughtful tone for the audience…
The differences between the book Giver and the movie Giver was that Jonas never went to the nurturing center…
Just imagine a world where everything was the same all the time. Every day, the weather as plain and ordinary as the clothes you wear. This is the world perceived in The Giver. The Giver is a story of a boy named Jonas living in a dystopian society where everything is the same; the people, the homes, the weather. Though they have eliminated all fear, pain, war, and hatred, they have also eliminated choice. But when Jonas is chosen as Receiver, he must fight to bring choice, passion, joy, and love back to the hearts of his community. This type of society differs from modern society. The culture of current-day varies from the novel’s as well as its structure and values.…
One difference between The Giver and The Prophet of Yonwood is that The Giver is unrealistic and probably won't happen, while The Prophet of Yonwood is very realistic and could very possibly happen. The Giver is set where everything is the same, no one can see colors, there is no emotion, and everyone's life is decided for them. The Prophet of Yonwood is set in the near future where a terrorist group is fighting with the United States, there are terrorists on the mainland, and everyone is scared out of their mind. In Yonwood a woman named Althea Tower had a vision of war and now everyone thinks she is…
As we read The Giver, we gain a deeper appreciation for our society and how it doesn't physically force us to be all the same. Since sameness was applied to Jonas's community, he couldn't comprehend what color was. Memories and emotions he received from the Giver were all new experiences. Also, after seeing the release of a twin, Jonas realized that in order for human beings to have a mind consciousness, they need to have differences. As we advance into the future, we humans may lose our identities from the major technological leaps; and so, we have to be aware and not overdo things to the extent of us losing who we…
In The Giver, the image Lowry sets is lifeless. For example, when Jonas asks The Giver about him noticing objects change, The Giver gives him the answer of color: “Before my time, before the previous time, back and back and back. We relinquished color…”(93). The setting is only black and white and no one has emotions. The people have never felt melancholy, overjoyed, or loved, this sets a robotic icon, due to them lacking emotions. Without emotions they don’t truly get to have a choice in anything. If someone were to steal one of their belongings they wouldn’t have the opportunity to have the emotion of anger, or the person who had taken the object, guilt. They don’t get a choice in articles of clothing they wear, as a result…
Imagine if everyone had the same house and the same bicycle. There would be no diversity. People would not be able to express themselves in the way that they wanted to, only the way that the government chose for them. Over time in “The Giver”, the inability to choose made the people of the community lack emotion. They did not care about what other people thought about them. For example, Jonas once said, “I certainly liked the memory, though. I can’t see why it’s your favorite. I couldn’t quite get the word for the whole feeling of it, the feeling that was so strong in the room.” Then the Giver replied to him, “Love”(157). This shows that until Jonas became the Receiver of Memory he was mostly incapable of having true emotions such as love, the strongest emotion on Earth. Only a fixed, controlling society could make others feel this way. It takes away the emotion, the love, the colors. It takes away what makes us…
Both of these stories have the same basic plot and story line but with different scenarios, different actions, different moods, etc. One seems to be more about the father, which they both include, but the other seems to be more about a friendship that was ruined for pointless reasoning. The stories are very similar but have many differences.…