In all aspects a utopian society is a society that is place to achieve perfection, and that is the society that both the “Uglies”, by Scott Westfield and “Harrison Bergeron”, by Kurt Vonnegut, was striving for. In both of these stories, the government had control over the people’s choices, freedoms, and their natural abilities. Yet both government strive for a perfect society, the methods they use to achieve this goal were different from each other. In “Uglies” by Scott Westfield the method the government use to strive for a perfect society is by giving everyone who is 16 or older surgery that turn them pretty because they felt that most people tend to be insecure about their appearance when they become a teenager or older . So to get rid …show more content…
of that the government decided to give those who age range from sixteen or older. Tally Youngblood is the protagonist who is about to get the pretty surgery, which made her happy because her best friend already lives in the pretty part of the city and with the surgery she will be able to live with him.
But when she almost gets in trouble by breaking into New Pretty Town. There she meets Shay, an ugly who is a little more hard headed. Shay and Tally argue a lot about whether the pretty surgery is a good thing. Finally, Shay tells Tally about a hidden town in the wilderness that she plans to go live. This place is where no one is pretty, but Tally refused to go with her. But unfortunately she's been watched by Dr. Cable of the secret police. Dr. Cable threatening Tally into going to find this hidden town and told if she doesn't help find this place, she will never become a pretty. Tally then agrees and goes on a dangerous journey to find the Smoke. It takes her a while to get there, but she was very happy to find Shay. But she was even happier to meet David, a boy who was born in the wilderness and the son of the Maddy and Az who was the smoke leaders and also his mother and father. Tally was supposed to call Dr. Cable when she arrived, but she begins to like the Smoke. David teaches her some somethings that that she had never learn when she was in Uglyville and also introduce Tally to his parents who tell her that the pretty surgery that many people are getting includes a side order of …show more content…
brain damage to make people controllable. So when Tally hear this she destroys the tracker that she's supposed to use to call Dr. Cable. Tally is happy in the Smoke, but the Special Circumstances was able to track down her location by the smoke of the burning of the tracker and comes to arrests everyone. Apparently the tracker that Tally had destroyed was thrown in a fire creating a huge smoke that the Special Circumstances use to track the hidden town. When the Special Circumstances got there Tally and David had already escape and went back to the city to rescue the captives there, including David's mom and dad. But they're too late to save David's dad from an experiment that erase all his memories and others. This is how he dead and Shay has already turned pretty. David's mom was still alive and she has come up with a way to cure the brain damage, but she needs a volunteer. Later on in the book Tally give herself to authorities and finally turn pretty. While in Harrison Bergeron the government achieved this goal of perfection by disabling all the talented and smart people because they felt that they were a threat to society and those who are normally disable.
It's the year 2081 and there are three new amendments added to the constitution that made American fully equal in every aspect. The 211, 212, and 213 were the amendment that were added to the constitution. George and Hazel Bergeron have a son named Harrison who was taken away at the age of fourteen years old. George Bergeron was a very intelligence person, so for people like him they had a radio set in their ear. There is a little sound wave that go off sometimes to delay their thought process. His wife on the other hand was not handicap because she was not above average like her husband. One night in 2018, the Bergerons are sitting in front of the TV watching ballet, with ballerinas wearing masks to hide their beauty and weights to hold back their grace and strength. The Ballet is interrupted when one of the ballerinas has a serious government news announcement to make. The news was about Harrison Bergeron who has escaped and is one his way to the ballet show! He rips off the door to the stage and storms on screen. He declares himself Emperor and takes one of the ballerinas as his Empress. Harrison and his empress both dance, fly through the air, and kiss each other. The Handicapper General, Diana Moon Glampers, did not care about how he feel about the rules, so
she shoots both of them dead with a shotgun. The Bergeron’s' television goes dark. But then it turns out that George had gone to get a beer, so it appears he missed the whole thing. Hazel cries, but soon can't remember why. Life quickly returns to normal. In my conclusion both governments created a harsh environment for their citizens. Yet in Uglies you were forced to turn pretty at the age of sixteen, I would rather live in that kind of environment than Harrison Bergeron because you are still able to do many things. Things like being intelligent, pretty, fast, athlete, etc. that prohibited in Harrison Bergeron. I sometimes worry about our future and wonder if society might be like this because many are insecure about many things.
Utopian literature is characterized by being a place where you are free and everyone is free. Most people in a utopia are happy. However, in the story of “The Pedestrian” and “The Lottery,” the rebel rebels against the system and is punished as a result. In both stories, it seems there is a utopia but as the rebels speak out it, it is revealed that the society is, instead, a dystopia.
At the first glance, an image of the society portrayed in the “Harrison Bergeron” short will put the reader at a halt. This short story depicts a nation that has made the world a place of pure equality. “They weren't only equal before God and the law. They were equal every which way. Nobody was smarter than anybody else. Nobody was better looking than anybody else. Nobody was stronger or quicker than anybody else.” (Vonnegut). The government had completely taken over the nation and its people. There were handicaps for those who had advantages over anyone else. Power was non-existent in this land. Mainly because all of it belonged to the government. If there was ever a time to see the imbalance of power it would be now. This story is not only a fictitious short to entertain the reader. This Short is a warning to the world providing a view of the consequences of power. “Ironically, no one really benefits from these misguided attempts to enforce equality” (Themes and Construction: "Harrison Bergeron"). Even on the television programs, beautiful women with handicaps placed on their faces. “They were burdened with sashweights and bags of birdshot, and their faces were masked, so that no one, seeing a free and graceful gesture or a pretty face, would feel like something the cat drug in.” (Vonnegut). An elaborate handicap had been placed over the whole country and the public was fine with it! Power causes more than a hardship if not detected. It ruins lives. The people of this short will never know what it means to be
Harrison Bergeron is a short story that creates many images and feelings while using symbols and themes to critique aspects of our lives. In the story, the future US government implements a mandatory handicap for any citizens who is over their standards of normal. The goal of the program is to make everyone equal in physical capabilities, mental aptitude and even outward appearance. The story is focused around a husband and wife whose son, Harrison, was taken by the government because he is very strong and smart, and therefore too above normal not to be locked up. But, Harrison’s will is too great. He ends up breaking out of prison, and into a TV studio where he appears on TV. There, he removes the government’s equipment off of himself, and a dancer, before beginning to dance beautifully until they are both killed by the authorities. The author uses this story to satire
……………Most of the numerous and very disparate urban utopias imagined since antiquity, claim more or less a social justice combining equality, fairness, and freedom. However the methods invented to reach this social justice often lead to more binding law, sometimes up to the absurd, that limited the abilities and capacities of the citizens. Thus, behind the mask of an ideal equality, is concealed in fact, a tremendous social injustice. In “Harrison Bergeron”, Kurt Vonnegut’s shows us the consequences of sacrificing freedom for perfect equality by using the story of an excessive utopia to demonstrate that a society in which total equality exists, is not only oppressive, but also static and inefficient. Vonnegut exemplifies the image of fairness
In this society everyone is obsessed with beauty. And the Uglies are the people between the ages of 12 and 16 they live in a remote community far from the beautiful people. In this community the Uglies anxiously wait for their 16th birthday. At the age of 16 they go through a mandatory plastic surgery in order to live up to society’s standards. After they go through plastic surgery they will be known as pretties, and they will also live with all of the other gorgeous people.
Kurt Vonnegut’s science fiction, short story, “Harrison Bergeron” satirizes the defective side of an ideal, utopian American society in 2081, where “everyone was finally equal” (Vonnegut 1). When you first begin to read “Harrison Bergeron”, through an objective, nonchalant voice of the narrator, nothing really overly suggests negativity, yet the conclusion and the narrator's subtle description of the events show how comically tragic it really is. Vonnegut’s use of morbid satire elicits a strong response from the readers as it makes you quickly realize that this scenario does not resemble a utopian society at all, but an oppressive, government and technology-controlled society. “A dystopian society is a
The definition of Utopia is, “an imagined place or state of things in which everything is perfect.” The rules and controls listed above and the many more that are in the book “Anthem” describe a society trying to become collective but in a utopian way. The purpose of these rules and controls is to keep the society collectivist. Fear is what runs this society. “.
Although the comparisons are well hidden, both today’s society and the story ‘Harrison Bergeron’ share similar qualities. They both deal with equality, which leads to problems and consequences. A second similarity is the struggle of competition and trying to prevent it from occurring, which also leads to problems. Lastly, both struggle with normality, and the fact that it’s hard to accept that different is okay now.
In today society, beauty in a woman seems to be the measured of her size, or the structure of her nose and lips. Plastic surgery has become a popular procedure for people, mostly for women, to fit in social class, race, or beauty. Most women are insecure about their body or face, wondering if they are perfect enough for the society to call the beautiful; this is when cosmetic surgery comes in. To fix what “needed” to be fixed. To begin with, there is no point in cutting your face or your body to add or remove something most people call ugly. “The Pitfalls of Plastic Surgery” explored the desire of human to become beyond perfection by the undergoing plastic surgery. The author, Camille Pagalia, took a look how now days how Americans are so obsessed
Undoubtedly, the thought of living in, or forming a utopian society has flashed through nearly every person’s mind. A few people have even tried to make this ideal dream society a reality. Unfortunately, within the pursuit of these societies the leaders become corrupt and begin to become paranoid with the fear of rebellion. Hundreds of people were murdered during the reigns of Adolph Hitler and Joseph Stalin in what they considered measures to maintain peace and stability within their respective “perfect” society. One must also consider the hardships that the citizens were forced to endure while living under these oppressive governments.
“Harrison Bergeron” is a short story written by Kurt Vonnegut. Vonnegut’s story shows the struggles of the protagonist, Harrison Bergeron who is a symbol that represents defiance, and independency. Harrison is used in the story to show how the government is using the three new Amendments as a cruel way to force equality between everyone. The new Amendments added to the Constitution are the 211th, 212th, and 213th they kept everyone equal and nobody was allowed to stand out (177). The story shows one main conflict which is the equality of everyone and it is between Harrison and the government.
The media has had an increasingly destructive effect on young people who are becoming worryingly obsessed with their body image. The media is saturated in sexual imagery in which young people have to face every day. The sheer volume of sexual imagery in the media today has resulted in the vast majority of young people to become hooked on looking as near to perfection everyday by using the latest products and buying the latest fashions. This used to be enough but lately the next step to achieving perfection is cosmetic surgery. Everyone wants to look attractive, especially teenagers who are not only put under massive strain to succeed but to look beautiful and climb the ranks of the social ladder, and it seems that the only way to achieve the much desired beauty is to turn to drastic measures.
Life is a very valuable asset, but when lived on someone else’s terms its nothing but a compromise. The seemingly perfect image of Utopia which combines happiness and honesty with purity, very often leads in forming a dystopian environment. The shrewd discrepancy of Utopia is presented in both the novel ‘The Giver’ by Lois Lowry and the film ‘The Truman Show’ directed by Peter Weir. Both stories depict a perfect community, perfect people, perfect life, perfect world, and a perfect lie. These perfect worlds may appear to shield its inhabitants from evil and on the other hand appear to give individuals no rights of their own. By comparing and contrasting the novel ‘The Giver’ and the film ‘The Truman Show’, it can be derived that both the main characters become anti-utopian to expose the seedy underbelly of their Utopian environment which constructs a delusional image of reality, seizes the pleasures in their lives and portrays a loss of freedom.
Revolutions and civil wars have taken place and totalitarianism has become a fact that can hardly be ignored. Therefore, the modern age has become a time in which more anti-utopias have been envisioned than ever before. A lot of authors have expressed their views on utopia in their novels. Some have done it by creating their own perfect world, while others have chosen a different path. They have been selected to voice their opinions in anti-utopian novels, or dystopia.
In Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, truth and happiness are falsely engineered to create a perfect society; the belief of the World Controllers that stability is the the key to a utopian society actually led to the creation of an anti-utopian society in which loose morals and artificial happiness exist. Huxley uses symbolism, metaphors, and imagery to satirize the possibiliy of an artificial society in the future as well as the “brave new world” itself.