The Giver

1275 Words3 Pages

As the famous lawyer and politician James E. Faust once said, “Some of our important choices have a time line. If we delay a decision, the opportunity is gone forever. Sometimes our doubts keep us from making a choice that involves change. Thus an opportunity may be missed.” Once, the famous John Newbery Award was awarded to the spectacular novel The Giver by Lois Lowry in 1994. In the novel, the protagonist Jonas, became what is known the receiver of memories. For Jonas, he has dealt with problems inside the dystopia everyone thought that it was a perfect utopia. He finds out that a baby named Gabriel was going to be released; which means that Gabriel will go through the heart-breaking stages of euthanasia. Because of this, Jonas and the …show more content…

Though fighting with starvation and loneliness, Jonas and Gabriel find the place, known as “elsewhere.” While modern society is similar in some ways to Jonas’s society, the differences with emotions, jobs, and laws/rules reveal the concept of choice. Firstly, emotions in a society reveals how human interaction affects their daily lives. The whole community takes pills, that neutralizes their emotions. Early in the story, the society suppresses the thoughts of love when Jonas thought, “For a moment, though, [Jonas] remembered the dreams again. The dream had felt pleasurable. Though the feelings were confused, [Jonas] thought that he liked the feelings that his mother called stirrings… Very briefly, a little guiltily, he tried to grasp it back. But the feelings had disappeared. The stirrings were gone” (39). This shows that the community does not endorse the feelings that one can have. In the modern community, one can like whoever you want to like and that is …show more content…

Firstly, girls under the age of 9 have to neatly tie their hair back. Early in Lily’s chastisement statement through the loudspeakers, they announce, “Attention, this is a reminder to females under nine that wear ribbons are to be neatly tied at all times” (23). This shows that even the young will be chastised for breaking rules. In modern society, people have freedoms that allow us to wear anything without being persecuted. Secondly, adults have to take pills to stop Stirrings. In the early stages of development of the plotline, Jonas remembered the announcement, “Attention, a reminder that stirrings must be reported in order for treatment to take place” (37). This explains the concept of love, because the pills also suppress these kinds of emotions that people need in their lives. In modern society, couples are allowed to do whatever they want. Anyone can have stirrings and have to tell everyone because it’s private between one’s mind, and themselves. Lastly, children can not take items from the recreation center, because in the dystopia, it is considered rude. Towards the ending of Jonas’s time at the recreation center, he forgot an apple was in his pocket. The speaker made a sturn announcement regarding the apple, saying, “Attention, this a reminder to male elevens that objects are not to be removed from the recreation area

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