Harrison Bergeron Essay

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Harrison Bergeron by Kurt Vonnegut is a portrayal of a dystopian society where the government is using oppressive techniques in an attempt to force absolute equality among the citizens. The short story explores themes such as conformity, dystopia, rebellion, resistance, and revolution. Harrison Bergeron is set in the future where “equality” is forced on the citizens in an attempt to keep them average. Vonnegut focuses on the attempt to achieve this equality by using handicaps, which ends up simply stripping essential qualities of being human. The government oppresses its people in order to avoid “be[ing] right back to the dark ages again.” This implies a long history of government brainwashing and control that stretches back, leading to generations …show more content…

The handicaps keep the citizens from becoming more superior than anyone else by limiting their intelligence, athletics, or beauty. Depending on how each character would be perceived as “above average”, their handicaps vary. Our main character George has a mental handicap, a transmitter on his ear that would emit a sharp sound about every twenty seconds. Hazel, George’s wife, was said to have “perfectly average intelligence” and she could only think in short bursts. During the short story, George and Hazel watch some ballerinas dancing on the television. The eight ballerinas had handicaps such as sashweights, bags of birdshot, and masks to hide their beauty. A major device that Vonnegut uses to drive home the emotional impact of his story is his use of alienation and dehumanization at the end of the short story. During the ballerina’s dance, Harrison, George, and Hazel’s son, appear on the stage after an announcement about his prison break. He removed his handicaps and wanted people to join him in his revolution against the government, to join his new

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