Choice Of Allegiance In The Divergent By Veronica Roth

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Choice of Allegiance Can one Choice define you? In Veronica Roth’s dystopian novel, Divergent, that is just one of the questions that will have you searching for answers. Roth will have you questioning your personal social role on society after you read her novel. The novel follows the point of view of the protagonist, tris Prior, who must decide on faction to join and pledge allegiance too for the rest of her life. There are five factions total. Read how the choice of allegiance, living with the choice, and the outcome of the choice all show key elements in social critic as Veronica Roth brings to life her dystopian novel The Divergent. Although Tris is raised in her parents’ faction, at the age of only sixteen she like every other …show more content…

Each faction’s places value solely on a specific virtue, which members work their entire life to perfect. Roth make the story more relevant to modern readers by including aspects of our own society in the Divergent universe. In an interview with Roth, Good reader member Becky Webster ask, “when you were 16 what faction would you have chosen and would that decision be the same today?” Roth replied, “When I was 16, I would have chosen Candor. I found it difficult to trust people when I was younger for various reasons, and I think have seen Candor as a place in which it is safe to trust, because everybody is so transparent. Today, I would have chosen Dauntless. I struggle with fear daily and sometimes it makes me feel trapped. I think bravery makes you selfless and …show more content…

She is successful and ranks first. She slowly realizes that in the excitement of the day, the Dauntless leaders have again exercised their power by injecting a serum in members to fight Abnegation for them. This again shows the corruption of total power in society leaders. Realizing the control over fellow Dauntless members tris gets Four and they set out to reverse the serum and fight the simulation. The story continues in Roth’s second book of the Divergent Trilogy Insurgent. Divergent has been well received and in a review given by The New York Times, Susan Dominus wrote that it was, “rich in plot.” Common Sense Media commented on the book’s “deep message about identity and controlling societies” and on its unstoppable

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