The Ones Who Walked Away From Omelas

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Short Story Essay On Omelas

In the short story “The Ones Who Walk Away From Omelas,” published in 1973, Ursula Le Guin portrays a city without sorrow, misery, and jealousy. The city reveals an enormous amount of happiness and joyfulness; everyone is happy, healthy, the weather is perfect, music is great, and the overall quality of life is great. It is a city filled with elegance, beautiful scenery, and yet is quite simple. While reading the reader can catch the sense that Le Guin is trying to portray a utopian society. The only problem however, utopian societies do not exist. Coincidently, there is in fact something terrible; a child who is being sacrificed. He is being forced to live a harsh life for the sake of the people’s happiness and the idea that happiness comes with a price to pay is brought forth. The story begins with the festival of summer. Here the town is described to have beautiful streets, great craftsmen, cheerful people, and to be free of negativity. However, this is at the price of a horrible and gruesome act. The town’s perfection is dependent upon the misery of one child. As long as the child is treated sadistically, the people of Omelas can enjoy their happy lives of success and perfection. Le Guin uses a Utilitarian idea where the suffering of one kid is made out to be a tradeoff for the good that it brings the rest of the city. As described by Le Guin, the suffering of just one child does has less of an effect than having thousands of happy citizens. This is emphasized by Le Guin in a quote towards the end of the story, “they all understand tha...

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... forces the reader to choose between the happiness of the child, or the happiness of the whole city of Omelas. This is an allegory for the relationship between the wealthy (eg. Developed countries) and poverty (eg. Developing countries). The wealthy, developed countries (Canada, USA) are represented by the people of Omelas, and the poor, developing countries (Sudan, Somalia) are represented by the child. Without the poor, the wealthy would not have the happiness it does. The citizens of the joyful town benefit from the child being so badly treated because without it, they wouldn’t understand how much better their life is than the child’s. “They feel disgust, which they had thought themselves superior to.” (Page 3) There is a price to pay between the happiness for all at the expense of the child, and the happiness of the child at the expense of the happiness for all.

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