Harrison Bergeron: A Dystopian Society

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Never would I thought that we have a dystopian-like society in our world. Don’t know what a dystopia is? It is a society set in the future, typically portrayed in movies and books in, which everything is unpleasant. The novel Harrison Bergeron by Kurt Vonnegut is a dystopian story of a fourteen-year-old boy named Harrison who grows up in a society that limits people’s individuality. When he is taken away from his parents, because of his strong idiosyncrasy, his parents do not even recall his presence because of the “mental handicaps” that the government forces onto them. Harrison eventually escapes from his imprisonment and tries to show others that they can get rid of the handicaps and be free. Though the government official, or Handicapper …show more content…

The way the government is controlled in North Korea is a similar system to the Handicapper General in Harrison Bergeron. The government of those of these societies harshly controls everything that goes on. For example, in Harrison Bergeron, citizens are required by law to wear handicaps in attempt to make every equal. "…had a little mental handicap radio in his ear. He was required by law to wear it at all times. It was tuned to a government transmitter" (Vonnegut 14). Akin to this, the government control in North Korea is not quite to the extreme of the society in Harrison Bergeron, though it is very strict and people are not given many basic rights. "North Korea has tightened control over the country’s northern border to reduce flight, and has continued systematic interrogation and torture of North Koreans caught and forcibly returned from China “(Human Rights Watch NA). Another similarity is in the dystopian topic of it being the illusion of a utopian world. This meaning the society is meant to be so perfect that it ends up becoming unpleasant. In Harrison Bergeron, Hazel thinks about what it would be like to always hear the sound of chimes in her head through the mental handicap. "I think it would be kind of interesting to hear all the different sounds" (Vonnegut 38). Hazel is oblivious at the time to the fact that the mental handicap is a way of limiting your thoughts. Hazel believing that there is nothing wrong with what

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