"Dehumanizing in a clockwork orange" Essays and Research Papers

Sort By:
Satisfactory Essays
Good Essays
Better Essays
Powerful Essays
Best Essays
Page 7 of 50 - About 500 Essays
  • Good Essays

    A Clockwork Orange: Violence and Corruption Alex‚ the fifteen year old narrator of Anthony Burgess’s novel‚ A Clockwork Orange‚ lives in a society where violence reigns. This novel has a very direct nature‚ and is often blunt to the point of offense‚ but this makes it more powerful and helps to further its point. This point is that everyone is out for themselves‚ whether they be the police‚ government or citizens of this society. In this book‚ the police can be just as violent as Alex and

    Premium A Clockwork Orange Crime Government

    • 972 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The film opens with a close up shot of Alex dressed in white with gray suspenders showcasing his false eyelashes on his right eye and with the brim of his pork pie hat tilted slightly downward. His ominous blue eyes peering right through you as if you did not even exist. Slowly the camera pulls back as Alex takes a sip of drug laced milk revealing the type of company he keeps. His “droogs” as Alex called them were seated next to him on a bench in the Korova Milk Bar. The Korova Milk Bar was decorated

    Premium Classical conditioning Behaviorism Ivan Pavlov

    • 2151 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Essay 2 Through out "A Clockwork Orange‚" leaders and governments have a profound affect on the characters. The government of the State lets the young adolescence run wild and rampant. Alex leads his group as a communist dictator who is later over thrown. Both Alex and the State use varied forms of propaganda to convince their followers that they are right. The State and Alex both have similarities to the United States and Russia during the Cold War. From the vary start of the book the influence

    Premium A Clockwork Orange Stanley Kubrick

    • 756 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    A Clockwork Orange – Ludovico technique 1. What is the Ludovico Technique? How is it meant to work? Pay close attention to the text in your response. The prison Chaplain confirmed Alex’s idea of the Ludovico technique as a technique that is meant to be a sort of treatment that “gets you out (of prison) quickly and makes sure you that you don’t get (back) in again.” It is said to work by showing a series of a special type of film to the ‘patient’ and injecting something that is said

    Premium A Clockwork Orange Evil Good and evil

    • 1077 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    A Clockwork Orange Biography In the year 1962‚ there was a boy by the name of Alex DeLarge‚ and he was the leader of a gang called the “droogs.” He has three best friends named Georgie‚ Dim‚ and Pete who also make up the entirety of the gang along with Alex. One night‚ the boys decide to get very drunk on milk laced with drugs‚ and go out on a streak of horrible violent acts. They beat an elderly lady‚ fight a rival gang‚ steal a car‚ almost kill a man named Mr. Alexander‚ and rape his wife

    Premium Criminology Crime

    • 2104 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    “‘A Clockwork Orange’ comparison of the book and film.” A Clockwork Orange is a dystopian nightmarish fantasy of a near-future England‚ where teenage hooligans neglect the somewhat standing laws of society‚ and take control of the streets after dark. The novel’s main character‚ fifteen year old Alex‚ and his three ’droogs‚’ take place in all-night acts of random violence and total destruction. This dark image Burgess has presented to the reader portrays his view of what he believed would be a

    Premium A Clockwork Orange Stanley Kubrick

    • 704 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    -Anthony Burgess’ dystopian novel‚ A Clockwork Orange‚ takes on the theme of free will and why it’s highly crucial to people in society. In his novel‚ Anthony Burgess explores the absence of free will from a government project leading the main character‚ Alex‚ to become sick whenever he thinks of violence‚ leaving him defenseless‚ and having suicidal tendencies. After undergoing the experiment‚ Alex finds the violent acts that he once loved are now unenjoyable and sickening whenever they are upon

    Premium A Clockwork Orange Stanley Kubrick

    • 1956 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    study is “Psychological Analysis of a Film Clockwork Orange”. 1.2 Objective: 1. To analyze the movie based on its structural elements. 2. To analyze the movie based on Adler’s theory of Individual Psychology. 1.3 Importance of the Research: There are two benefits expected from this study they are as follows; * To give additional information and contribution to large body of knowledge * Particularly the studies of the Clock Work Orange movie. * To improve the researcher’s

    Premium A Clockwork Orange Classical conditioning

    • 7165 Words
    • 29 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    public and private life. A recurring theme in the Utopian genre is the resulting creation of a dystopia in an effort to reach Utopia. Two novels which clearly illustrate this convention are Aldous Huxleys Brave New World and Anthony Burgess A Clockwork Orange‚ later adapted by Stanley Kubrick as a film. Other conventions of the Utopian genre include lack of depth of characterization‚ and the texts ability to analyse the state of the society in which it was written and to provide an array of possibilities

    Free Brave New World Stanley Kubrick The World State

    • 952 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Anthony Burgess’s A Clockwork Orange presents a dystopian society in which the individual is suppressed in order to facilitate complete state-control; the novel being abundant in both intertextual and contextual influences due to the universal concept of the struggle for freedom in the face of an oppressive regime. There are numerous works which can be associated with the novel; Alan Moore and David Lloyd’s V for Vendetta exhibiting traits indicative of influence‚ George Orwell’s 1984 providing much

    Premium A Clockwork Orange Stanley Kubrick

    • 990 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
Page 1 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 50