"Alex tabarrok" Essays and Research Papers

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    Symbolism In The Nadsat

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    Alex is the leader of his gang‚ has a privileged place in it to enjoy hurting‚ controlling every detail. Nothing escapes his approval in his misdeeds‚ and he and the rest enjoy being violent. Gets a unique pleasure to see blood‚ that is linked to music. Both make him feel an indescribable pleasure when he hits someone. Music is used against him in Ludovico treatment as aversion therapy of violence‚ and is associated to negative feeling that hurts and makes him feel physically ill (Classical conditioning:

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    belonging

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    fake eyelash and an elaborate top hat‚ symbolically the mockery of a civilised society‚ and it is through this intimate close-up that the audience realises that the character of Alex is i n fact an evil one. This is further reinforced in his character’s name‚ “A-lex”‚ which literally means ‘without law’‚ showcasing that Alex is a character with a “law unto himself”. This choice of character’s name‚ coupled with the intimate close-up‚ demonstrates that he does not care for positive interactions within

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    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 and Pete often accompany him on his escapades‚ delving into what Alex refers to as ‘lashings of ultra-violence’. The term ‘ultra-violence’‚ refers to exceptionally violent acts such as‚ assault

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    narrator Alex‚ is a teenager in a futuristic city where citizens are controlled by a corrupt‚ authoritarian government. Adult society seems to have been brainwashed into a trance as their free will is stifled. Alex is at odds with the citizens of this uber- controlled society because his free will is unfettered by super-ego and his propensity to use brute force is useful to the totalitarian government. We must first look at a typical day in his life at the beginning of the novel to understand Alex. He

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    Clockwork Orange

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    about moral choice and free will. Alex ’s story shows what happens when an individual ’s right to choose is robbed for the good of society. The first and last chapters place Alex in more or less the same physical situation but his ability to exercise free will leads him to diametrically opposite choices—good versus evil. The phrase‚ "what ’s it going to be then‚ eh?‚" echoes throughout the book; only at the end of the novel is the moral metamorphosis complete and Alex is finally able to answer the question

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    In the novel/film “A Clockwork Orange” written/directed by Anthony Burgess/Stanley Kubrick‚ we are thrown into a futuristic dystopian world of England. In this world we are thrown into a society where a 15 year old boy named Alex narrates his life through this area. Alex‚ the Faustian protagonist of A Clockwork Orange‚ and a sadistic and depraved gang leader preys on the weak and innocent. Alex’s society/neighborhood consist of a lot of youth violence and corruption within the state. The film stays

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    In both ‘A Clockwork Orange’ and ‘Brighton Rock’ characters are faced with choices that develop and intensify the plot‚ making the novels both stimulating and thought provoking to read. Brighton rock’s Pinkie is aware of the choices he makes‚ though he acknowledges the difference between right and wrong he falls foul to the temptation of wrongdoing. Pinkie choses damnation over salvation‚ the decision derives from the fact Pinkie is aware of God but refuses the idea of being pure and good nonetheless

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    where violent criminals are forced to be "good‚" and introduces us to Alex‚ a young teen who engages in a life of rape‚ ultra-violence‚ and Beethoven with his "droogs‚" or friends‚ and talks in the slang language of "nadsat." He goes through various phases in his life‚ evolving into a more mature level of thinking; each of these phases can be seen as clockwork orange. What makes this novel so realistic however‚ is how real Alex really is and how each of his phases into maturity represents a part

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    key role in the presentation of the main protagonist Alex DeLarge‚ and his schoolboy sociopathy. Corrupt and naive‚ 15-year-old Alex narrates his own story with a language that only the author and the characters in his fictional world could truly understand; specifically those characters among Alex’s group of thugs. It seems that his language is a sort of code for those that are uneducated‚ unruly‚ and live to terrorize. The irony is that Alex himself is a rather intelligent young man for his age

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    life from the eyes of a fifteen year old English hoodlum. Burgess effectively broke arcane traditions when he wrote A Clockwork Orange by blending two forms of effective speech into the vocabulary of the narrator and protagonist‚ Alex. Burgess‚ through his character Alex‚ uses the common or "proper" method of vernacular in certain situations‚ while uses his own inventive slang-language called "Nadsat" for others. Many experts believe that the use of these two types of language and the switching from

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