In the short story Harrison Bergeron and in the novel Fahrenheit 451 both display that everyone is equal and that no one is better looking or smarter than anyone else‚ this is the law of both states. An example of this in the novel is that no one can read or have there own thought and if they try to disobey the law they will be killed. An example from the short story is that George was smarter than most people in his town so they put a transmitter in his head to make a noise every 10 seconds and
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Harrison Bergeron The Cold War was a tough period in American History. Families constantly living in fear over what might happen next. Kurt Vonnegut lived through out the time period of the Cold War. In that time he wrote many pieces of work‚ one of which is “Harrison Bergeron.” This short story takes place in America 2081‚ where everyone is “equal.” Vonnegut relates his work back to the Cold War and the threat of Communism by using the symbolism of handicaps and total government control. “Nobody
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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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Naive Need for Social Equity In his science fiction‚ satirical short story‚ “Harrison Bergeron” (1961)‚ Kurt Vonnegut presents a society in which all people are handicapped to be equal‚ normal‚ average‚ despite being born with different genetics and abilities to explicate the downfalls of the American people’s fear as well as need to be equal in Vonnegut’s time. He develops this ideal through a story about the Bergerons‚ who are presently watching an average ballet in a manner that is concise
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Harrison Bergeron made a valid argument against conformity. Harrison was smarter than the average person‚ so the government came up with a way to make him equal‚ they placed headphones onto his head so that they would buzz to distract him and make him think like the average person. Harrison had a problem with this as the passage says‚ “Harrison smashed his headphones and spectacles against the wall” (Vonnegut 3). Harrison smashed his headphones and spectacles in anger because he was tired of being
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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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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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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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The two stories that I chose for this first assignment were Harrison Bergeron (pg.198-202) written by Kurt Vonnegut‚ Jr.and The Story of an Hour (pg.279-280) written by Kate Chopin. Both stories that I read had 2 very different time periods from each other. The Story of an Hour was set in 1894 and it was about a woman that has heart problems and had just received news that her husband was dead. She went up into her room and started crying and was called by Josephine‚ her husband’s friend‚ to come
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hurt by bullying? In the story “All Summer in a Day” by Ray Bradbury and in “Harrison Bergeron” by Kurt Vonnegut‚ Jr. people are getting hurt two different ways‚ but in the act of jealousy. In “All Summer in a Day”‚ a girl name Margot (on Venus) knows more about the sun than the other children‚ yet‚ instead of the other children wanting to know more and hearing her out‚ they put her in a closet. And in “Harrison Bergeron”‚ there’s a handicap general who forces everyone to wear some kind of tech/gear
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