The Giver by Lois Lowry includes a major concept of Freedom. Freedom may come easily to some people but in The Giver people don´t have the freedom of choice or even the freedom to express feelings , they get to make no choice such as what they would like to do as a career, who they would like to marry additionally their not even allowed to love someone let alone expressing it. The Giver reveals the horrible outcomes of a community which has relinquished their freedom to secure its safety. In this essay the points which will be stated include…
The theme of freedom is examined in both texts, the giver, and Harrison Bergeron. The giver shows us that freedom is critical to learning and to happiness. We see the consequences of sacrificing freedom for perfect equality. For example, Jonas is selected and forced to become the receiver of memory. He receives a range of memory from the giver and this enables him to question the structure of his community and ultimately the lack of freedom. In comparison to Harrison Bergeron, we see a different way in which the authorities restrict freedom. George has been given an ‘ear radio' that eject uncomfortable sounds every time he has critical thoughts. In both texts, their freedom of choice has been taken away from them.…
Through various “word gifts”, the author instills in readers the authentic definition of the occasion: a threefold gift of love, family, and faith.…
Li-Young Lee’s, “The Gift” unquestionably communicates several ideas, some rather direct, and others buried within the rhetoric and composition of the poem. Although the meaning (of the poem) may be left to interpretation, one of the most prominent concepts of the story, in my belief, is the gift of love and consequent tradition of offering it to loved ones. In the beginning of the poem, the narrator describes his father comforting him in the painful situation of removing a metal splinter from his hand: “My father recited a story in a low voice. I watched his lovely face and not the blade.” The father’s calm and affectionate demeanor can be further attested to in the second stanza, “...I recall his hands, two measures of tenderness, he laid…
In The Giver, The Elders who are the leaders and the members of the government decide on an answer; they choose to let go of the individual right such as freedom of speech and freedom to choose that people had fought for in the past in exchange for the development as a nation which leaves the people without any rights as citizens nor a human being and makes their world a dystopia. The search for what is more important between individual or community good still remains as a mystery for people today and will never have a definite answer. However, this lesson would at least benefit everyone from choosing the wrong…
Throughout America’s communities today, the quality of schooling varies from school to school. In the book Our Kids the author, Robert Putnam, believes that the increased gap between the wealthy and poor is what causes the differences in school quality and opportunities for the students (Putnam, 2015). Recently, I had the pleasure of interviewing two of today’s youth, Josh and Erin. Their names have been changed for the sake of anonymity. Josh is a 17-year-old student at Shawnee Mission East High School, in Prairie Village, Kansas.…
According to the American Library Association (ALA), young adult novels are challenged with the best intentions. In most cases a parent will read a book that their child might be reading in class to find out if the book is hazardous to their child’s well-being. If the novel seems problematic, the parent then challenges the book. Even though the purpose of challenging a novel is to keep children from reading about issues that may not be seen as appropriate for their age group, censoring children from difficult subject matter is not always the solution. There is always controversy when difficult issues arise in adolescent geared novels. Even though there are many concerns with Lois Lowry’s The Giver, this book should not be banned from the Coopertown Middle Library.…
Lois Lowry’s novel “The Giver” follows a young boy named Jonas. Jonas, a unique child in his uniform society that controls everything. He lived in a seemingly perfect world. In the book, Jonas demonstrates courage and integrality in his willingness to continue to become a receiver even after the bad feelings of pain and suffering. He also is courageous enough to begin to take on the task of questioning…
Why is their society, in The Giver so different than ours? Their society is so different because they think that they can make their world perfect. We all know that no one is perfect so what makes it so different? In Lois Lowry’s book The Giver their family unit interacts with each other on a day-to-day basis and has both similarities and differences in our family unit which is better than theirs because ours does not have a limit of children, do not have required time shares, and we like to keep track of age.…
Free will is crucial to an individual’s life, a source of strength for all humans. Lois Lowry’s The Giver (1993) is about sacrifice, rules and order, the consequences of peace, and ultimately, the significance of free will. Jonas, the protagonist, lives in an intended “Utopian society”. It is a society without passion nor apathy, independence nor enslavement, created in attempt to produce an orderly community where pain is nonexistent. Yet such society has a flaw—the lack of human rights. Free will is a vital element of an individual’s personal, professional, and political life. The supposed ideal life of Jonas’s community in The Giver fails to promote free will, contradicting…
" 'It wasn't a practical thing, so it became obsolete when we went to the Sameness.' " (84) The Giver, by Lois Lowry, is told from the perspective of a twelve-year-old boy named Jonas growing up in a Utopian society. At the Ceremony of Twelve,where every Twelve receives their life-long occupation. Jonas finds out he has been selected to be the Receiver of Memory, the most honored of Elders. The current Receiver, called Giver by Jonas, transfers memories of pain, joy, feelings, and color to him. As he receives each memory, he yearns for a life outside of the one he has been trapped in for so long. This book proves that being "perfect" is not as great as it sounds. The Sameness, what the Utopian society Jonas lives in was based upon, has no real benefits to the community because there are no feelings, no diversity, and no choices.…
In some cases, people don’t succeed, In the novel_The Help, by Kathryn Stockett, everyone is unfair to the black society and they get treated very unfairly. Skeeter is very upset with the way the maids are treated, because of that, she succeeded and made a change. In the novel_The Help, by Kathryn Stockett, characters show that people can grow and change by taking risks individually and as a society. She broke two cycles by helping various people overcome fears and by going against society by being friends/friendly with the maids.…
In the book The Giver, Lois Lowry takes his audience on an out of body experience of a completely different community and way of life. The Giver is a story that leaves you on your toes throughout the book. The way sick babies or elderly people were “released” or the way the world works in a totally controlled society, this book definitely changed how I look at everyday life. The point of the book, I think, was about the consequences of taking away pain, suffering and war by taking away individual choice. And the snowfall effect of taking away choice is that you have to take away emotion as well.…
"We fear rejection, want attention, crave affection, and dream of perfection," said Anonymous. The community in Lois Lowry’s The Giver wants to have perfection — a utopia — and they have achieved it. Their ideal society has citizens that never had the pain of war, never had to go hungry or homeless, and consequently, they never have experienced any emotions.…
Imagine a world devoid of colour and emotion, a world without individuality. This is the kind of world that Jonas lived in, a world where no one knows their real parents, where they don't celebrate birthdays, where they don't truly know all of the joys of life. That was all Jonas knew; at least, until he was selected as the new Receiver. Suddenly, Jonas had so many memories, memories of the past and what it used to be like, and he started to realize that his society wasn't all he thought it to be. In the novel The Giver by Lois Lowry, Jonas learns that those who don't take risks will never grow, without memories knowledge is useless, and that he needs to be true to what he believes in.…