"Alex Ferguson" Essays and Research Papers

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    fear is also there however the first-hand account is missing as the audience only get the side of the evil dictator-Alex and his gang- until later in the novel when the government take away Alexs’ freedom although even then sympathising with Alex is not something the audience can do after all he still is as bad as he was before he began the treatment and critics would argue that Alex deserved the treatment. Similarly both societies are violent and run using harsh techniques such as the ludivicos

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    grow out of it‚ but doesn’t know how to; he needs the initial push which starts with Laura leaving him. Contrary to this‚ Alex in A Clockwork Orange doesn’t want to grow up. He loves his life on the streets‚ robbing and beating people up. However‚ he makes a crucial mistake‚ he lets his ambitions get the best of him which leads to his friends turning their backs on him and Alex has to go to prison. Because of his immaturity he wants to be the leader of his gang and that is the process that starts

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    language forms conversations between the narrator‚ Alex‚ and his teenage‚ delinquent friends. There are many assumptions as to why Burgess chose to complicate A Clockwork Orange by filling it with the confusing Nadsat language. Some opinions are that the language shows A Clockwork Orange readers where Alex and his "droogs" were located socially in society‚ or that Burgess was attempting to brainwash his audience‚ just as the authority figures brainwashed Alex and other members of their community‚ or finally

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    night the leader of a gang that rapes and brutally assults inisant people. By night Alex DeLarge is exercising his free will as he does whatever he wants. But this asks the question‚ what would be a fair punishment for such crimes? It’s certainly considered immoral to rape and violently assault people in their very own homes. But is it then considered moral to steal someone’s free will? These questions genuinely

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    the malevolence in forced conformity. The protagonist‚ Alex‚ is a criminal who doesn’t belong anywhere within society. In the novel‚ the government attempts to suppress his criminality by physically preventing him from thinking of violence—thus making him conform to their standards. This is allegorical for how society attempts to make us conform to what is considered ‘normal’. Towards the end of the novel‚ the character F. Alexander tells Alex: “They have turned you into something other than a human

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    the oxymoron. The ultra-violence done by Alex and his droogs is unthinkably bad‚ yet for the police to beat the criminals is socially acceptable? It is made quite clear throughout the novel that the police even consider such brutality to be fun. When Alex is taken into custody‚ he refuses to speak until he has a lawyer. He knows the law‚ he says. The head policeman replies‚ "…we know the law too‚ but that…isn ’t everything." He then proceeds to punch Alex in the stomach as the other policemen "laugh

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    Animals and Language

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    dances to convey a message but they are bounded. Animals that have discrete structures are bounded and those that are bounded are discrete. A study was done on an African Grey parrot named Alex. He was taught many symbols‚ colors‚ and numbers. Alex did not have that intelligibility to construct long sentences. Alex had the same intelligence of that of a five year old. His level of intelligibility remained constant. After early attempts to teach chimpanzee’s oral language‚ many

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    Alex's Integrity

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    keeping his integrity firm in position and not falling short to any tests of courage. These characteristics are clearly depicted throughout Crocodile Tears as Alex interacted with his social environment and did not fail in any life-threatening plights. To continue‚ the foremost example of Alex’s integrity can clearly be distinguished as Alex did not lie or deceive others when addressing his undisclosed situations unless required to do so by the M16 authorities. In an example‚ he confessed a majority

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    1 Animal Languages

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    Animal "Languages" From: Fromkin‚ Victoria‚ et al. 2007. An Introduction to Language. 8th Edition. Boston: Cengage. Is language the exclusive property of the human species? The idea of talking animals is as old and as widespread among human societies as language itself. All cultures have legends in which some animal plays a speaking role. All over West Africa‚ children listen to folktales in which a "spider-man" is the hero. "Coyote" is a favorite figure in many Native American tales‚ and many an

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    Clockwork Orange is written in the first person by the main character‚ Alex. Three of his "droogs"(friends) that help him in his crimes are Dim‚ Pete‚ and Georgie. Throughout the story‚ the author creates his own language called "nadsat"‚ which is used by the youth of the futuristic world. "Nadsat" is a mix of Russian‚ English‚ and the slang words of both. The story begins at the start of a wild and violent night with Alex and his friends sitting in a diner. To start a typical night they encounter

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