Harrison Bergeron Equality Theme

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Vonnegut 's “Harrison Bergeron” is set in the year 2081 and “everybody was finally equal.” (1306) The idea of equality in the story is very different from the traditional American idea of equality. It 's not only an idea of equal treatment under the law, but of being “equal every which way. Nobody was smarter than anybody else. Nobody was better looking than anybody else.” (1306) Those who were stronger wore weights on their bodies to handicap them, and the beautiful were forced to wear ugly masks. Rather than elevating those who are lower in society, everyone who is above average is brought down to the lowest common denominator. The ballerinas on TV are forced too wear “sashweights and bags of birdshot” and masks “so that no one, seeing a …show more content…

(1306) Each time George begins to have an intelligent thought, it is interrupted by a horrific sound in his head. He begins “toying with the vague notion that maybe dancers shouldn 't be handicapped” until the sound of a ball peen hammer hitting a milk bottle “scattered his thoughts.” (1306) Similarly, he is made to wear a 47 pound bag of bird shot around his neck as a physical handicap. When his wife Hazel suggests that he take a few of the lead balls out of it, just while at home, George is adamant that he will not. After all, as George points out, “The minute people start cheating on laws, what do you think happens to society?” to which Hazel responds, “Reckon it 'd all fall apart.” (1307) George warns Hazel that they would be “right back to the dark ages again, with everybody competing against everybody else.” …show more content…

She cannot imagine what it is like to be special or to have abilities that must be handicapped. Her “perfectly average intelligence... meant that she couldn 't think about anything except in short bursts.” At the beginning of the story, Hazel has tears on her cheeks, “but she 'd forgotten for the moment what they were about.” (1306) In her wildest fantasy of being the Handicapper General, the most revolutionary change she would make would be to play chimes on Sundays in the mental handicap radios “Kind of in honor of religion.” (1307) Hazel believes that she would be a good Handicapper General because, “Who knows better 'n I do what normal is?”

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