Kurt Cobain

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    “Only a minority of science fiction dystopias attempt to plumb the real existential roots of oppression, the flaws in humanity's nature that undermine our best attempts at organizing ourselves into social units” -Paul Di Filippo. Utopian societies are like airing up a popped tire; nothing is getting any better or worse. While - the complete opposite of a Utopia - dystopian societies are in a state where people have no control over anything and are “slaves” of the government. There are places…

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    The short story “Harrison Bergeron,” by Kurt Vonnegut is fictious story about what a dystopia could possibly be like. The theme in this story is freedom. Freedom is something that the world recquires in order to not be considered a dystopia. Equality is what our nation has been shooting for this story helps build a future for that. However, think of all the advances in technology, this will not happen in the future if everyone is recquired to be equal. In this story everyone had to be equal. Not…

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    States of America. In the short story, “Harrison Bergeron,” written by Kurt Vonnegut Jr., has taken equality to the extreme. In the story, it hints at the reader what can happen in the future if the wrong person gets in charge of the government. With the influence of media, Vonnegut expresses his responses about equality and individual freedom when “everyone is equal in every which way” in “Harrison Bergeron.” Biography Kurt Vonnegut Jr. was an American all time favorite author who wrote…

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    A Self-Styled Society The short stories “Harrison Bergeron” by Kurt Vonnegut and “The Lottery” by Roald Dahl, feature dystopian and utopian societies. A dystopian community is characterized as an illusion of an ideal society maintained through extreme control of society. Utopia is delineated as a place conserved by customs. In the dystopian novel, “Harrison Bergeron,” the government makes the citizens equal by attaching restraints to them which decreases their IQ level, strength, and…

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    Harrison Bergeron In Harrison Bergeron Kurt Vonnegut writes a short story about an american dystopia of the future. This short story is a satire and work of black humor. His tone throughout the story is sarcastic and sardonic and he also displays a dry witty sense of humor he adopts the same tone throughout the story even though he is talking about a dangerous and worrying situation. He uses satire to point out the absurdity of a society where everything is controlled, “The year was 2081 and…

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    “Nobody was smarter… nobody was better looking… nobody was stronger or quicker,”(Vonnegut 1) everyone was equal. All of this is achieved in the short science fiction, “Harrison Bergeron,” by Kurt Vonnegut Jr. The story is about a 14 year old boy named Harrison Bergeron who is beyond “normal” and how everyone who ever ‘above average’ have to wear handicaps. Handicaps prevent them from using certain abilities, it made people’s strongest abilities weaker. But, Bergeron is considered dangerous…

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    Films often portray the collective conscience of society. This perspective lends Stanley Kubrick’s Dr. Strangelove or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964) a resonating voice in the film genre. By utilizing comedy, one of the most powerful tools in fiction, he created an exceptionally savage film. Kubrick’s political satire is a landmark film and one of the most significant pieces concerning the cold war. The film’s satirical spirit is every bit as caustic now as it was over…

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    it at the musicians and told them they had ten seconds” (5). If anyone were to rebel, they would be killed. In the year 2081, everyone is equal in every single way. No one is better than anyone else. This is the short story, “Harrison Bergeron by Kurt Vonnegut.” Anyone with too much power is afraid of societys true intelligents. In this short story one of the conflict. Everyone must be equal so no uniqueness is acceptable. George, one of the characters, is extremely smart. The handicap…

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    Kurt Vonnegut helps create a futuristic idea of what the world could be like, and portrays it through his dystopian short story, “Harrison Bergeron”. Using Irony, simile and personification, Vonnegut enlightens readers about how power isn’t always used properly and to spread a better idea and to show that misusing power with therefore leave society worse off. Several examples of this can be found in the short story, in an effort to create a “perfect society” they blindly follow certain practices…

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    to convince someone that your opinion is the right one to have? Would you burn someone’s opinion in a furnace? That is what Charles McCarthy did to a book that he did not want students in his school district to be reading. In response, the author, Kurt Vonnegut, wrote a letter titled, I Am Very Real to McCarthy. In this letter, Vonnegut effectively persuades McCarthy that burning his books was un-American and wrong by using ethos, pathos, and logos. By appealing to pathos, Vonnegut makes…

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