Harry Maynard Rox Character Analysis

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Demonstrated in the text, Taylor is deceived by two of the most important people in her life - her parents. Her demanding and self-contained mother, Kara Trent, shares a very unusual connection as Kara doesn’t seem to love Taylor as a daughter but treats her more like a robot given directions. Taylor’s knowledgeable and innocent father, Adrian Stokes, is different to Kara as he actually cares about his daughter and has a real connection with her as he comforted her in her difficult times and was honest to her, well towards the end of the story. But in the book, Kara’s uncertain husband had no say in what happens to Taylor in their experiments on her and therefore has no control, unlike Kara, and deceives his daughter without realising …show more content…

The text is able to identify Taylor as one of the young teenagers to be deceived by the Senator. On page 80, it was specified that she believed the man she called Uncle Maynard thought that she was going to receive an award for observing her ‘farmie cousin’, Barrett, and his reactions to the alien world he now temporarily lived in. This reveals that she looked up to him very highly as she believed she could trust him to do anything for her. Because she is deluded into thinking he has everything under control according to his plan and it was going to end well no matter what, she presumed that everything he did and said was directed towards the purpose of becoming a hero of the media and the Chattering World (pg. 168). But towards Chapter 16, Taylor was able to realise that she was as much as an animal in a lab experiment as Barrett. Like her parents, the Senator was also using her without her perceiving, to develop advertising techniques from her reactions to certain products and the civilisation with advanced technology and negativity from the research Taylor’s implants had provided (pg. 160 and 242). Rox was able to mislead Taylor (and the public) again into believing the Q-Plague was very contagious as it was thought the illness killed almost everyone who got it. The whole idea that the deadly disease would spread simply by direct contact was considered a complete overreaction, but people were blinded in the text by the convincing advertisements of the antibacterial products and ridiculous stories of the media, encouraged by Rox and the products’ companies, referred to Eva on page 61. By hearing the news of a juvenile teenager dead because of the infectious Q-Plague and another being treated by the Cue-Kill and feeling better, the Senator is able to make the story more interesting enough to persuade the media and people to buy the cure as it is mentioned as the

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