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    Epilogue To The Giver

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    should’ve changed things‚ but they didn’t and we are all upset about that. Now please go out and see your friends find out what these feelings are and I will make sure the Chief elder does not interfere.” There was a couple nodding of heads and the Giver went on‚ “Please try to make the best of this situation and find out what feelings not stirrings feelings that you may have. Find out if you do love your spouse‚ find out if you like religion or not‚ find out if you are happy with your life and you

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    The Giver Strength

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    Free Will‚ A Source of Strength: An Analysis of Choice in The Giver Free will is crucial to an individual’s life‚ a source of strength for all humans. Lois Lowry’s The Giver (1993) is about sacrifice‚ rules and order‚ the consequences of peace‚ and ultimately‚ the significance of free will. Jonas‚ the protagonist‚ lives in an intended “Utopian society”. It is a society without passion nor apathy‚ independence nor enslavement‚ created in attempt to produce an orderly community where pain is nonexistent

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    Jonas In The Giver

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    Everyone is supposed to be different. In the novel The Giver the protagonist‚ Jonas is different from everyone else. Jonas sees things no one else can. He’s sees color and memories from the past. Anyone could compare their lives to Jonas‚ but not all. In conclusion‚ everyone can see color it’s normal for us but not for him. Jonas’ first color he sees is red‚ compared us on earth we understand all colors. In the novel Jonas and Asher were tossing an apple back and forth and Jonas noticed the

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    Bread Givers

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    Bread Givers The book‚ Bread Givers is a novel written by Anzia Yezierska following the lives of woman who have to go through struggle because of new tradition verses old tradition. In the book I found that there are several themes within the book Bread Givers. Woman Rights‚ being one of them‚ seem to be an issue throughout the book. This book revolves around the lives of woman in a household on Hester Street in New York City. In the 1920’s times were not easiest for immigrants. In this book

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    The Giver Comparison

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    Have you ever wondered how much characters can be alike even if they are from different novels? In “The Giver” by Lois Lowry‚ a very smart and intelligent 12 year old boy named Jonas‚ gets a very high ranking job as the Receiver of Memory. Also‚ in “The Batboy” by Mike Lupica‚ a 14 year old boy gets the job everyone young boy could wish for‚ being a batboy for the Detroit Tigers. Jonas from “The Giver” and Brian from “The Batboy” have many similarities and differences. These young men have a lot in

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    The Giver Essay

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    Hanson‚ Carter F. "The Utopian Function of Memory in Lois Lowry’s The Giver." Extrapolation 50.1 (2009): 45. Literature Resource Center. Web. 9 Mar. 2016. “The Utopian Function of Memory” by Carter F. Hanson criticizes the role of memory in the plot and formation of aspects in the Lois Lowry’s “The Giver” like how it can be transferred scientifically by touch and how without it‚ the Utopian world could function smoothly. Hanson means to compare this novel’s setting to be similar to the settings of

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    Why is it always assumed that the community in The Giver is imaginary? A form of it exists in real life. Jonas‚ a seemingly ordinary boy living with his parents and sister‚ finds out that the community where he lives is not at all what it looks like‚ leading him to take an extraordinary journey. Due to the existence of all-controlling governments‚ the real world is not completely removed from the dystopian worlds of The Giver and Nineteen Eighty-Four. People living under a Marxist-Leninist

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    Chapter 1: The plot begins with a utopian society of sorts that exemplifies perfection and every living thing existing in agreement. Flourishing ranches encompassed the town described by Rachel Carson and phenomenal vegetation. The Spring in this town was an absolute beauty. A drastic change suddenly overcomes the image and poisons the life. People and animals begin to become sick as a result of environmental destruction from toxins. Chapter 2: The trend of humans harming their environment has

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    The Giver Utopian

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    The term “utopia” describes “a perfect society…that protects the people from the worst ills of humankind (Source A‚ Paragraph 1).” This term is portrayed in Lois Lowry’s novel‚ The Giver. Jonas‚ a young boy living in a utopian community‚ believes that his world is perfect. There is no suffering‚ hunger‚ war‚ or pain‚ and everything is under control. However‚ when Jonas becomes the Receiver of Memory‚ the imperfections of the utopian community are revealed to him by the memories he receives. Throughout

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    Chapter 2 The novel begins with the narrator and protagonist‚ Christopher Boone‚ finding Wellington‚ the dog who is owned by Mrs. Shears his neighbour‚ dead. He discovers the dog on Mrs. Shears’s lawn with a large fork through it. Christopher touches the dog and observes that it is still warm. He asks himself who would do such a thing‚ and why? Chapter 3 This is the first in a series of chapters that deter from the novel‚ giving an insight from Christopher. He proceeds to explains that he has difficulty

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