My book The Giver, written by Lois Lowry is about a twelve-year-old boy named Jonas. Jonas lives in a futuristic world where there isn't much diversity, there are no fear, misery, and other awful conditions in life. In this world, you don't have many choices. When you're the age of twelve you get assigned a job in the community at the Ceremony of Twelve. Jonas was enthusiastic about getting his job. He didn't really prefer a job, but he liked to volunteer in the community. Jonas was privileged with a job that called The Receiver of Memory. The Receiver of Memory is someone who keeps the memory of the community. Jonas and other people in the community had no knowledge of what The Receiver of Memory is.…
Through various “word gifts”, the author instills in readers the authentic definition of the occasion: a threefold gift of love, family, and faith.…
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.…
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, Jonas starts out as an ordinary young boy with no significant positive traits. In the novel, Jonas shows no out of the ordinary characteristics. There have definitely been no outstanding achievements, or noble qualities presented. All that is given based on Jonas’ “personality”is Jonas’ obsession with correct language(Lowry 3). He shows a constant weariness and concern with his word choice and the word choices of others around him,…
An example of symbolism in “The Giver” by Lois Lowry is the sled. The sled comes to Jonas many times. The first time was just a peaceful glide down a snowy hill on the sled, which I think represents trails. The first ‘trial’ Jonas goes through is nice and enjoyable. The second time the sled appears is when Jonas is sleeping.…
13. According to The Giver, why did Jonas have to receive and store memories of pain?…
The capability of the memories are so powerful that Jonas experienced how they felt and he could actually sense them. For example on the first page of chapter 11,“ Then he shivered… tongue touched the suddenly chilled air, or “ He felt it blow against his hands…”, (Lowry)these quotes show that the memories grip a great power. The memories made Jonas perceive words he had never knew of before. They let him feel sensations that he had never knew existed. Jonas needed these memories because they were going to become a major part of his life. This is only one of the great things the memories can do. These memories also can cause awful things, such as destruction. When talking about sharing memories with the Giver, the Giver denies the idea. “… the community has to bear the burden themselves…great chaos…” (Lowry 194-195)so if the memories were to be released there would be great a pandemonium and vast destruction. But after conquering that, everyone will have wisdom, the ability to feel, and emotions, to live normal lives. From all the memories it is learned that the memories hold both good and bad…
Rileigh Leighton January 26, 2017 Mrs. Tiernan ELA “Usually it’s just a matter of birthweight. We release the smaller of the two”(Lowry 114). In the book The Giver the people who live in the community aren’t allowed to choose what they want to do with their lives. These people live under a strict set of rules solely focused on everyone being the same.…
In the Giver, when the new receiver of memory, Jonas saw it that one person should not suffer like this and would be better if everyone would have a little of the memories. He saw from the memories that the community took away also took a lot of common great living from the people and made everything dull and boring from what it was before.…
The Giver is about a boy named Jonas, who is selected to hold memories for the public. This is because of the pain and chaos that would ensue if the people had memories. This “Utopian” society may not be that different from our own.…
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…
In the novel The Giver by Lois Lowry, twelve year old Jonas states that a community with love would be a "dangerous way to live." Well to think about this, you must first answer the question, What would be a secure place to live? When we think of invulnerability, many of us consider our families, friends, and loved ones. There is that word again; love. Love is kind, warm, and healthy, but sometimes it can be considered dangerous. For example, if you are in love with someone who does not have feelings for you, it can cause pain and sadness. If Jonas's community had memories of agony, there is a large chance it would fall apart. Jonas made the correct choice to leave the community, because no one there truly loved him, aside from the Giver himself. The citizens of his society deserve the truth about the world. Although Jonas was accurate in saying that love is dangerous, he was also incorrect because love can be merry, fortunate, and full of joy.…
The novel forms a loose quartet[3] with three other books set in the same future era: Gathering Blue (2000), Messenger (2004), and Son (2012)Jonas, who is eleven years old, is apprehensive about the upcoming Ceremony where he will be assigned his job or his "assignment in the community." In his society little or no privacy is allowed; even private houses have two-way intercoms which can be used to listen in for infractions of the rules. However, the rules appear to be readily accepted by all, including Jonas. So it is without real protest that he initially accepts his selection as the Receiver of Memories, a job he is told will be filled with pain and the training for which will isolate him from his family and friends forever.…
Jonas has recently received a bad memory. The memory consisted with Jonas getting his leg bone broken and being terrified. Giver did not regret giving Jonas the memory because it was part of his training. It was time to end the training meaning it was time for Jonas to head to his dwelling. Jonas left so the Giver was trying to get rest. All the sudden the bad memory Giver just gave to Jonas was triggering another bad memory to Giver. This memory was one that scared Giver the most but he stayed strong, or at least the first time. The only reason the Giver wasn't able to tolerate the memory was because he wasn't expecting such a harsh memory. The memory was about warfare and it lasted all night as well as in the next day.…