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    The Giver Is A Dystopian

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    The Giver is an example of dystopian literature‚ because they don’t allow people to make their own choices. Differences were hated so much that they made them only see black and white. The elders don’t know anything about the real world like war or starvation. The elders control the people of the civilizations food rations. The elders live in a community where when you get too old‚ or if you don’t comfort yourself as an infant‚ or if you’re the smaller of twins‚ or if you want to leave then you are

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    Community In The Giver

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    The giver is about a perfect community. A community where nothing bad happens and everybody is the same. In the community there is a boy named Jonas. Jonas has been selected to be the Receiver Of Memories. Being the Receiver is a great honor because you have to keep all the community’s memories and learn about what used to exist in the community. A utopia is a place where everything is perfect and nothing bad happens. A dystopia is the opposite of a Utopia because it is a place where everything is

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    Bread Givers

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    man has a woman an existence‚” he proclaims. He was raised to believe that woman can only go to heaven if they marry a man or a man of the Torah. Also in his beliefs‚ the man was supposed to read and study the Torah as the woman were the “bread givers.” In this case the Smolinsky women were his slaves. The wife and three daughters of Reb Smolinsky would work hard every day to pay rent and to put food on the table. Every day at dinner Mr. Smolinsky would get the best part of the meal‚ the fat

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    the giver notes

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    those‚ when I was selected. And here in this room‚ all alone‚ I re-experience them again and again. It is how wisdom comes. And how we shape our future.” ― Lois Lowry‚ The Giver “He hunched his shoulders and tried to make himself smaller in the seat. He wanted to disappear‚ to fade away‚ not to exist.” ― Lois Lowry‚ The Giver I believe that Jonas’ assignment as the next Receiver of Memory is an honor. It has only a few negatives‚ but many important and serious positives. I will start with

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    Birthdays In The Giver

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    In the dystopian novel‚ The Giver‚ by Lois Lowry‚ and in the current American Society‚ birthdays are celebrated both similarly and differently. In both societies birthdays are acknowledged‚ however in unlike ways. In The Giver‚ Jonas’s society acknowledges birthdays through a mass celebration in December until they are 12 years old. Every child 12 or younger‚ celebrates their birthday on one out of two days reserved for celebration. “The Ceremony of 12‚” on the second day‚ is the final celebration;

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    Symbolism In The Giver

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    had asked the giver why are there no colors. The Giver said‚ “Our people made that choice‚ the choice to go to sameness‚” (Lowry 95). This describes how in Jonas’s community there is no climate as the community made the choice to have this type of climate control; and this exists in our society today. In The Giver‚ Jonas finds out that his community doesn’t know what the meaning of color and the feeling of it. Climate control still exists in our world today. Readers of The Giver in this world

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    Women In The Giver

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    sisterhood is full of strength and pride directly linked to their ability to sustain themselves. Whereas in The Giver‚ adolescents are medicated during puberty in order to suppress the urge to have sexual desires. The act of carrying a child is connected to sexual acts in a vulgar way the community is not allowed to discuss. Does the presence of man inherently make conception an obscene act? The Giver in a society of both men and women outwardly cover up the process of natural conception‚ while Herland celebrates

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    Wisteria In The Giver

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    Both‚ Aspen and Wisteria have pale eyes‚ but Wisteria has a darker shade. Wisteria has great respect to the elders and The Giver. Aspen is quite a downer and thinks on the darker side of things‚ but Wisteria seems to cheer him up ( a little bit). All is normal until the unthinkable happens...Everyone in the community is gathering for the Age Ceremonies‚ including the Giver. Wisteria is very excited because one of her best friend’s‚ Jessimay‚ who was a birthmother‚ baby is going to be named. She

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    Language In The Giver

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    In the novel The Giver the people in the community believe that precision of language is a vital part of life and in The Giver‚ language is often distorted and twisted. They distort language as a way to control the community in a way that is discrete and clever. The community proposes different terms to conceal the real meaning and what is actually happening. Thee elders make disturbing and mournful situations‚ seem less meaningful and less disturbing‚ and more normal. The community also has different

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    Bread Givers

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    Anzia Yezierska’s Bread Givers attacks several social norms of both her traditional Polish homeland and the American life her protagonist has come to know. Clearly autobiographical‚ Bread Givers boldly questions why certain social and religious traditions continue throughout the centuries without the slightest consideration for an individual’s interests or desires. Sara’s traditional Jewish upbringing exposed her to a life dominated by patriarchal control; when she arrived in New York to seek

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