fiction stories like to commentate on our world. Some like to show what will happen in the future if something continues to happen‚ others like to show things that could be going on in the world now. The science fiction stories Fahrenheit 451 and Harrison Bergeron show the government wants to hide information from people‚ that the government wants to keep people in the dark and ignorant. The government doesn’t want people to think. This line of text from the book "Fahrenheit 451" shows how people feel
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In “Harrison Bergeron‚” author Kurt Vonnegut Jr. illustrates government control with the characters of George‚ Hazel Harrison Bergeron‚ and the society that they live in. Vonnegut Jr. directs his writing to society and people in general who want to achieve total equality‚ as well as those who put faith into the government when it comes to resolving serious issues. To inform his audience of the dangerous consequences that come with wanting to achieve total equality‚ Vonnegut Jr. presents imagery‚
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person. Some of them where placed with mask to cover their faces‚ and things worn around their necks‚ large glasses that distorted their vision. The government wanted everyone the same. It was April and that’s when the government came and took Harrison Bergeron from his parents home. His parents Hazel of average smarts and then the dad George who was smarter than her. George
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Within the story of Harrison Bergeron‚ there are many different aspects that Kurt Vonnegut wrote about. However‚ some are easier to identify compared to others. Some of the things and aspects that Vonnegut wrote about in Harrison Bergeron can be clearly identified by the words stated whereas other aspects written about take a bit of thinking about. Beginning with what was directly stated. In the year of 2081‚ everyone was required to be equal by the government. If some citizens were more better in
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to wear handicaps that make them equal...but are they really equal? People in 2081 were given handicaps to make them equal. Except some people could do something‚ when others couldn’t‚ even with their handicaps. The people in the short story “Harrison Bergeron”‚ are NOT equal. People weren’t equal because they didn’t have the same disabilities. For example‚ in the story the reporter had a speech impediment‚ but everyone else didn’t. Another example is on page 5‚ where Diana Moon Glampers‚ the Handicapper
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Kurt Vonnegut’s dystopian story‚ Harrison Bergeron‚ is set in the year 2081‚ when everyone has been made equal. The means used to create this equality are not in any way unthinkable‚ although we may like to turn them away and think of them as such. Examining the first 50 years of the 20th century‚ you will notice a trend of reliance‚ trust‚ and general obedience to the government and the way things are. In the 60s however‚ with the anti-war protests and movements‚ citizens of the US became more aware
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exaggeration‚ sarcasm‚ and irony‚ satire forms its own complex collection of literature. Branching from this genre‚ dystopian literature attacks human vices through a different route: the metaphor of a futuristic corrupt society. In Kurt Vonnegut’s Harrison Bergeron and Disney Pixar’s Wall-E‚ dystopian societies work to alert the audience of current issues that‚ if not resolved‚ could negatively alter the world. While both societies appear farfetched‚ Wall-E’s prediction of Earth in 2805 is more plausible
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author of this story think that the laws in my country need to be more strict so they’ll be less chaos and I think it’s stupid that everyone is always competing.” Then through the course of time other more modern authors have seen stories like‚ “Harrison Bergeron‚” and have decided that they want to a dystopian kids with incognito political views too. Not all dystopian writers are writing purely to voice their opinions but there’s still some opinion in any book that is written just because that’s how
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Would you enjoy living in a dull‚ mediocre society where everyone is the same and nothing ever changes? In Kurt Vonnegut’s short story‚ Harrison Bergeron the citizens in America who have unique characteristics are given “handicaps” to make them like anyone else. This created a mundane society where nothing new is introduced and everyone leads boring lives. Although lifting up people who are ungifted would make the amount of people who needed to be handicapped negatively decrease it would also
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wondered why something is said one way but means something totally different? Symbolism and allusion are used to make stories more interesting and more understandable. In the three stories Harrison Bergeron‚ The pedestrian‚ and the lottery symbolism and allusion are used in many ways. First‚ Harrison Bergeron was a symbolic character. He was given handicaps from the handicapper general to represent who he was. He was required to wear a bag of birdshot around his neck to represent to weigh him down
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