"A Clockwork Orange" Essays and Research Papers

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    In A Clockwork Orange‚ Alex uses the nadsat word “horrorshow” extensively to describe many things including actions‚ events‚ and observations. The first occurrence of the word comes on the very first page of the book‚ where Alex describes what happens when he drinks “the old moloko.” The true meaning of this word is difficult to determine because of how Alex’s morals are twisted. He uses it to describe a wide variety of things like blood‚ murder‚ beatings‚ rape‚ and‚ in the case of the first page

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    Kristen Kleiner Abnormal Psychology July 19th‚ 2012 Alex DeLarge in A Clockwork Orange A Clockwork Orange is set in futuristic Britain. The main character and narrator‚ Alex DeLarge‚ is the leader of a sadistic teen gang. Alex introduces his “droogs”‚ or friends‚ as Pete‚ Georgie‚ and Dim. After getting intoxicated at the Korova Milk Bar‚ they perform a series of “ultra-violent” crimes. This includes beating a homeless man‚ fighting a rival gang‚ and theft. They also play “Hogs of the Road”

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    Few films have replicated the controversy of Stanley Kubrick’s A Clockwork Orange (1971). Created during the ‘Golden age of American Film violence’ between the 1960s and early 1970s and based on the Anthony Burgess novella of the same name. The Orwellian‚ science-fiction film‚ catalogues the life and crimes of antagonist Alex Delarge; a young‚ violent and hedonistic delinquent with an enthusiastic appreciation for music‚ specifically German composer‚ Ludwig van Beethoven. Alex’s ‘droogs’‚ Dim‚ Georgie

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    A Clockwork Orange: Good Riddance to Bad Rubbish A Clockwork Orange received critical acclaim‚ made more than thirty million dollars at the box office‚ and was nominated for various awards; however‚ this esteemed film was outlawed from the nation of Great Britain in order to curb its immoral content from permeating society. Before all the controversy began‚ A Clockwork Orange was a novel‚ written mostly in Russian‚ by Anthony Burgess. Stanley Kubrick is known to critics as a film maker who probes

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    Silent Metamorphosis A Clockwork Orange is an enthralling piece of literature filled with luscious vocabulary and controversial topics. Burgess uses his linguistic and artistic backgrounds to suck in his readers into a literary adventure while simultaneously bringing forth moral dualistic questions for them to ponder on. The novel presents a challenge to novice readers due to its unusual dialect‚ ascertaining only dedicated readers can understand it. Nonetheless the message it projects is enriching

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    possibility of moral transformation‚ or an increase in wisdom‚ operating in your chief character or characters. Even trashy bestsellers show people changing” (Burgess). In the novel A Clockwork Orange a moral transformation is shown whereas in the film it is absent. Although Anthony Burgess’ novel A Clockwork Orange and the 1971 Stanley Kubrick film version are similar in matters of the use of nadsat language and the presence of a self-serving deceitful government‚ they are however different in terms

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    "A Clockwork Orange" "A Clockwork Orange" is a film about a gang of "droogs" who take pleasure in crime. They enjoy raping and torturing their innocent victims for their own pleasure. The main characters ’ name is Alex. Alex ’s diagnosis is Antisocial Personality Disorder (Psychopath). When caught and arrested‚ classical conditioning is used in order to rid Alex of his vindictive thoughts‚ but is not very successful. Antisocial Personality Disorder is a Disorder that cannot be easily diagnosed

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    A Developmental Study of Alex in Kubrick’s A Clockwork Orange Synopsis of A Clockwork Orange In A Clockwork Orange‚ the main character is that of a mildly young child of 15 who‚ along with his fellow friends‚ or "Droogs"‚ partake in evenings of Ultra-Violence. Ultra Violence consists of random beatings‚ theft‚ destruction‚ and rape. The main character‚ Alex‚ is the self-proclaimed leader of the pack‚ and makes judgment on their actions pending on his mood. His Droogs eventually find themselves

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    Nadine Gordimer‚ South African writer and Nobel Prize winner‚ said that penetrating fiction doesn’t give answers‚ it invites questions. This quote is accurately reflected in Anthony Burgess’ novel‚ A Clockwork Orange‚ in which many questions and moral values are explored. Burgess strongly believed that humans’ ability of choice is the only factor distinguishing us between animals or machines. The two most predominant recurring themes of and questions relating to the novel involve ‘good vs evil’

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    Plato finds that society can be easily consumed by the mimetic imagination‚ in which people are tricked into believing that the imaginary is reality. Plato’s condemnation of the mimetic imagination alludes to Stanley Kubrick’s postmodern film‚ A Clockwork Orange (1971)‚ which features a youth gang driven by images of sex‚ violence‚ and drug‚ set in a dystopian future Britain. Furthermore‚ Kubrick’s film resembles Plato’s Allegory of the Cave‚ as the prisoners of the imaginary are introduced to new realities

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