One might ask how can they not know what is happening if they have a computer in their head? Corporation market to you and basically tell you that everything is perfect from an extremely young age, even though the world they live in is dying. The feed sends ads, as well as things such as the answer to a conundrum, directly into the brain further reducing the work that has to be done by the human himself. It has allowed us to do exceptional things such as putting humans on the moon, but there are those who know the cost of living with an invention of such tremendous capabilities. One of those people goes by the name of M.T. Anderson who was an exceptional writer winning the national book award for young people's literature as well as producing L. A. Times award winning novels. M.T. Anderson's extravagantly bothersome dystopian novel feed illustrates an alarming message of the escalation of ignorance in the human race due to the modernization of technology through a string of literary elements including quintessential setting, intense allegory, and clever …show more content…
Anderson exquisitely utilizes the component of allegory, explicitly Plato's Allegory of the Cave to directly relate the society of those in the awe-inspiring novel feed to humanity today. Titus along with his friends, are the perfect representation of what the corporations have been able to do to people. They shop at all of the hottest stores and visit all of the coolest attractions. They resemble the imprisoned people who were forced to stare at the shadows in Plato’s cave. Thinking that whatever they are shown on the walls or in Titus's case the feed is true. When Titus stumbles upon a remarkably guile girl, Violet, she releases him from the cave revealing the truth of the feed. Little to no challenge arises through the process of leaving the cave. When the time comes to return to the cave, then, problems