Harrison Bergeron Equality

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It is the year 2081 in Kurt Vonnegut’s short story, “Harrison Bergeron,” and society forces equality on America in the areas of beauty, strength, and intelligence through the use of mandated physical and mental handicaps. Vonnegut creates a world in which beautiful people are required to wear masks to cover their faces and strong individuals are forced to carry weights to make them equal to the weaker population by the government. For the intelligent men and women, headsets that blast random noises are worn to interfere with critical thinking and individuality. These handicaps are mandated by the government to be worn at all times, enforced by law to equalize all human beings. The protagonist in this short story, fourteen-year-old Harrison …show more content…

The irony that exists here is that nobody truly gains from these horribly judged legislative attempts to force equality on people apart from possibly the inept, like the television announcer who, “like all announcers, had a serious speech impediment,” (Vonnegut, 3). In Hazel Bergeron’s words, the announcer’s inability should be pardoned because his effort is “the big thing. He tried to do the best he could with what God gave him,” (Vonnegut, 4). Should anyone in that society be daring enough to be above average, he or she is immediately punished, exemplified by Harrison, who is murdered for fighting mediocrity and striving to excel and reach his full potential. By constructing a society with a goal of equality, the consequence being a contorted satire of civilization, Vonnegut hints that civil rights and individuality should never be surrendered and sacrificed, especially not for the so-called common …show more content…

Vonnegut uses Harrison in this short story to display that remarkable people will protest, rebel, and work against the handicaps until this brutal system is abolished. He writes, “Harrison tore the straps of his handicap harness like wet tissue paper, tore straps guaranteed to support five thousand pounds,” (Vonnegut, 5). Due to the mandated handicaps that prevent the citizens from becoming their aspirations or reaching their full potential, no competition is permitted. Without competition in any shape or form, there can be no improvement in any area of life. In this dystopia where individual disputes are non-existent because people have stopped competing with each other and cannot think for themselves, the result is a stagnant, deadpan society where universal normality is valued above all else. All innovation that requires individual thought will be halted, all critical thinking will end, and the economy will eventually collapse due to the lack of improvement. Vonnegut’s form of equality where everyone is the same will never succeed in any way because it demoralizes and dispirits the human race and stops all creativity and originality. Vonnegut wrote this story to show readers that all people should not be equal, but rather, individual strengths and weaknesses making

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