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    is practically impossible to have true equality. Writers have often attempted to write about true equality within a utopian society. Harrison Bergeron by Kurt Vonnegut‚ Animal Farm by George Orwell‚ and Brave New World by Aldous Huxley are a few examples. However‚ in their writing‚ the authors end up portraying the opposite‚ a dystopian society. In Harrison Bergeron‚ Vonnegut uses the setting to show the role of a dystopian society in order to illustrate that true equality is anything but that.

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    Analysis of Major Characters Harrison Bergeron Harrison represents the part of the American people that still longs to try hard‚ flaunt their attributes‚ and outpace their peers. At age fourteen‚ Harrison is a physical specimen: seven feet tall‚ immensely strong‚ and extremely handsome. The government does everything in its power to squelch Harrison‚ forcing him to wear huge earphones to distort his thinking‚ glasses to damage his sight and give him headaches‚ three hundred pounds of metal

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    Harrison Bergeron” by Kurt Vonnegut Jr. “Harrison Bergeron” by Kurt Vonnegut Jr. is a story literally exaggerated to its limit by showing‚ in the near future‚ what it means to be equal in every way by having people not being able to show any form of intelligence or creativity whatsoever. When Harrison Bergeron breaks the chains of government oppression‚ he dies for his failed cause. He dies because he chooses not to conform to the rest of his oppressive society. His parents‚ George and

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    story‚ “Harrison Bergeron” by Kurt Vonnegut the literary device‚ symbolism‚ develops the central idea. The central idea being‚ the government’s oppression and how it affects people. It is easy to rise from oppression‚ but people are too afraid to stand up. Harrison’s hindrance is that the government does not allow anyone to take off the handicaps. Harrison overcomes the obstacle by proving the government wrong‚ and doing the contrary. Symbolism is represented in the scene where Harrison declares

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    Extraordinarily Average Man “All men are created equal” these are the words of Thomas Jefferson. Jefferson believed we should live in a world like this‚ but are we meant to live in a society where everyone is equal and normal? The ideas of egalitarianism can be dangerous if they are interpreted too literally. The agonizing and frustrating normal world in which “Harrison Bergeron” by Kurt Vonnegut Jr. shows a civilization in which being normal is the only life style that people can live. Beauty is not beauty

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    happen to the world if the people were literally equal in every aspect of their lives? In the futuristic short story‚ “Harrison Bergeron” by Kurt Vonnegut Jr.‚ the world is finally living up to America’s first amendment of everyone being created equal. In this society‚ the gifted‚ strong‚ and beautiful are required to wear handicaps of earphones‚ heavy weights‚ and hideous masks‚ respectively. Thus‚ these constraints leave the world equal from brains to brawn to beauty. With the world constantly

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    Harrison Bergeron: Negotiation of Identity In a world with no individuality‚ is it possible for humanity to progress? In the short story‚ “Harrison Bergeron‚” the author‚ Kurt Vonnegut‚ presents the idea of a conformed society in which everyone is totally equal; if one is superior to another‚ then they must wear a certain handicap to supress their talent. However‚ the flaw in this type of society is the loss of one’s identity and freedom. A conformed society technically wouldn’t be very equal because

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    1. Define ’satire’ and provide one example of personal or social satire that yoou have encountered. You may use any source for your example:TV‚ media‚ news editorials‚ movies‚ comedy‚ etc. Satire can be defined as any work in which a human vice or folly is attacked with irony or sarcasm. An example of satire can be found in the song "When the President Talks to God" by Bright Eyes. In this song‚ the lyrics lay out hypothetical conversations between the President and God‚ which mocks current

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    "The story is a satire‚ a parody of an ideological society divorced from common sense reality" (Townsend). As Townsend stated Kurt Vonnegut makes a satire about society in his fictional short story Harrison Bergeron‚ which in their society there has been attempt of conformity through the handicaps of the people‚ the similarity to an authoritarian government‚ and the technology‚ whereas the people will eventually overcome. The Kind if government authority seen both mimics and satirizes the way Americans

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    Harrison Bergeron” Essay Throughout history a constant loop has appeared over and over again‚ a battle that is never won but is put to side and forgotten until it chooses to veer it ugly yet attractive head. This battle is the battle of equality to have happened to everyone who fights to reach an imaginary standard of equality. Equality is never defined and never can be because what equality is to a person is always different. Equality could be where white and black people are held at the same pedestal

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