What would it be like to live in a community where there is no individuality? In the novel The Giver by Lois Lowry the protagonist, Jonas in the story live in a community like with no individuality. Jonas changes over the book by questioning the community and breaking the rules in his community.…
To “live” means to wake up every morning, to experience life to its fullest, and to stay true to your values and what you stand for. There are many things that can contribute to the quality of life, for example, love, knowledge, hatred, war, family, and anything else that can alter the experience or values of life. In the film The Giver there seemed to be a low value placed on human life because of sameness. Everyone was doing the same thing everyday.…
Is there really such a thing as a perfect society? Although our society may not be perfect doesn't mean there isn't one. In the novel The Giver it shares “a perfect society” or a “utopia” but is it really so perfect. In the novel there are a few similarities to the modern society, on the other hand there are many differences between the two. There may be many things different between societies but there are still things that are the same.…
Many different societies around the globe experience many different social issues that affect the population. These issues affect the population in different kinds of ways. In the book The Giver written by Lois Lowry, Jonas struggles through making people realize emotions and finding a new way to live without the rules showing censorship. In the novel The Hunger Games written by Suzanne Collins, Katniss Everdeen struggles through poverty, loss, and dealing with an oppressive government as her family struggles through with the loss of her father. In the novels, The Giver and The Hunger Games, the protagonists struggle through the social issues of an oppressive (harsh) government, social justice, and censorship which requires courage and faith.…
In the novel The Giver, memories are the source of wisdom and pain. The society created by the elders, which lived in the old world, where there was chaos and agony. It's a supposed utopia. Everything is fair, everyone has the same education, family members, same life. There is no chaos or disease, it's “perfect.”…
Imagine wanting to learn something, but not being able to. Imagine wanting to share something, while being incapable of doing so. Imagine knowing the truth, while others are dying to find it. In a world of complete equality, traits that create human life are removed in order to create a better society. These are your feelings.…
The human aspiration for control has an element of cynical manipulation on the desires of society. Lois Lowry’s novel ‘The Giver’ and Andrew Niccol’s film ‘In Time’ portrays the potential harms of power through dystopian systems. Both texts scrutinize the exploitation of freedom through the development of a futuristic society that advocates potential harm to the human race. Through the progression of the two texts, Lowry and Niccol reveal a dystopian society, which at first is portrayed as a utopian setting. Societal norms have great influence in maintaining confirmative regulations for the system to continue operating; hence, both texts explore the consequences of corruption in an indoctrinated civilisation.…
Would the community in The Giver be considered a dystopia or a utopia. Many readers would consider this novel to consist of a dystopian society. A dystopia is a place where everything looks perfect but is the opposite of what a person may think .…
Not too long ago, I reread the most fascinating novel for the second time, but this time with my class. The Giver by Lois Lowry is an absolutely spectacular novel, revolving around a young boy, Jonas, who just turned twelve. Actually, he wasn’t the only one who turned twelve… it was all the Elevens in his community. Meanwhile, at the Twelve Ceremony, Jonas receives the most interesting Assignment of all; The Receiver of Memory. After the ceremony, nothing was ever the same again… for Jonas, at least.…
It is clearly possible for two entirely different people from diverse worlds to have uncommon thoughts and interests, but how is it possible they have things in common? Hannah experiences the great suffering and torture of the Holocaust. Passover was a very dreadful time for Hannah, but it is nothing like what she experiences when she enters through the door. She registers she isn’t where she belongs and has gone back in time. During the blast from the past, the young Jewish girl is sent away to a concentration camp.…
As an example, a child’s stuffed animal, bike, and even their clothes are given to them from the Elders. As an endnote, both societies try to be as perfect as perfect as possible to have the least amount of problems as possible. Three major differences between the futuristic utopian society, in The Giver by Lois Lowry and our modern society are that they have different value in choices, different interaction with other communities, and problems. On the contrary both societies usen history the same way, both similar events in life, and both try to be as perfect as…
The Giver, a novel by Lois Lowry, is about a boy named Jonas who lives in a world of Sameness. Jonas´s world has no color or emotions. Their is no weather and the climate is controlled. Nobody can make their own choices. They all get assigned to everything.…
Imagine a world without love. In the novel The Giver by Lois Lowry, the protagonist Jonas begins to be frightened but then figures out that frightened is not the word, and then experiences pain he undergoes a journey where he figures out how life was before him. In modern day society people have emotions and they are not forced to take pills to stop them. While Jonas’s society is emotionless, they experiences freedom to choose,and does not have the sameness, modern day society is free to love,celebrates individuality, and has the freedom to choose. One difference between Jonas’s society and modern day society is the lack of love.…
The Giver, by Lois Lowry, fits the description of a dystopian novel and appeals to young adult readers because of the plot, concept, and characteristics of the novel. The Giver tells a tale about a boy named Jonas who lives in a perfect world which he calls the “Community”. What he doesn’t know, along with many others, is the dark side of this utopia. As he goes through his journey as being the next receiver of memory - a special job selected carefully - the illusion of his perfect world, shatters. There are many means to find out if a novel is a dystopian or not, and The Giver hits many of those points.…
The society in the popular utopian/dystopian book, The Giver, may seem the better alternative of our modern day society, the dream land that everyone wishes we could achieve, but when we compare how each society functions, maybe this so called ¨perfect world¨ isn't as perfect as we would have hoped it to be. Modern day society and The Giver have may have some similarities, but when the two societies are compared to rules, family, and figurehead/leadership, it seems these two societies are worlds apart. Maybe, we have it better in our society than we originally thought. For instance, when rules come into play, it seems that modern day society has free range.…