The Maze Runner Essay

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Margaret Atwood once stated, “Our problem right now is that we're so specialized that if the lights go out, there are a huge number of people who are not going to know what to do. But within every dystopia there's a little utopia,” which is a perfect description of when talking about The Maze Runner. James Dashner presents his idea of dystopia in a society which the reader sees instead as a utopia in many points of the book. Indeed, this is what keeps the readers thinking who side is everyone on. If utopia is what Dashner was trying to succeed in his book, The Maze Runner, then all the aspects of a true dystopian society start to show its true potential. Generally speaking, a utopian society has many different characteristics, that shape …show more content…

A dystopian society is where nothing is perfect and are many flaws. This type of world is where the government runs the society and they become corrupt that no one knows who they can trust (Source 1). In The Maze Runner, a group called Wicked sent all these poor kids up to the maze so the government can run tests on their minds when they react to different situations. There is a disease out called the flare that is going around making people crazy and the only way to stop it is to find a cure with the immunes that are know in this death killing maze (Source 1).
In The Maze Runner, the government tries to have immunes living with non immunes to see the different reactions. This action is seen as the government trying to make a perfect world by saving everyone with the cure. They are taking the perfect kids that their bodies are already immune and letting them live with nonimmune to see if the non immunes can try together to make a middle class of all healthy and not people that have the flare. This is like having our real world society take teens who may not be as smart as others and then taking smart teens to try and make all smart kids or even right in the

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