Preview

An Analysis of Raw by Scott Monk

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
286 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
An Analysis of Raw by Scott Monk
Institutions can have positive and negative effects that can alter an individual's perceptions, judgment and values, as shown in the Book raw by scott monk, the yetta prison poem and the ‘reliving the Horror’. The way they are treated in the institutions may either change them into a better person or have great consequences that may effect the individual for the rest of their life.

You see positive changes in The novel "Raw" written by Scott Monk and the yetta prison by lmlmslkdm, Raw by scott monk is simple in style but introduces interesting and an acceptable insight to the concept of "the institution and the individual experience”.In the book Raw you see the positive effects, at the beginning of the book brett is distant and thinks the world is against him, He doesn't feel that the farm can change him, On arrival Brett meets the caretaker Sam, who is symbolized not only as a role model but also the cause of Brett's positive change along with Josh. Sam respects each individual equally and believes everybody deserves a second chance, but Brett, at the beginning does not tolerate anyone, especially people with authority – "they are the enemy, and you never get friendly with the enemy". This demonstrates Brett's attitudes and protest to the institution.

As a caretaker, Sam reiterates to Brett at the beginning, "just remember, Brett: only you can change your life". This meaning that only Brett has the power to change He has to want to change within himself without the help from others. Yetta prison is also another example of an institution that has positively effected the individuals through its way of rehabilitating, The individuals have a chance to re generate t

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Powerful Essays

    Wolfesberger (1975) identified some negative features of large-scale institutions, individuals were segregated from society often kept in degrading conditions and treated inhumanely.…

    • 1902 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    In ‘Raw’ by Scott Monk, Brett uses rebellion to escape from his fears and then be liberated from it; he does this as he believes it is the only way to freedom. When Brett first gets to the farm he is given trust and responsibility straight away which he is not used to as he has never been automatically trusted before. Brett is unaware of how to react to this, as he has only ever experienced negative forms of authority beforehand. Brett believes that Sam is naïve and stupid for giving Brett and the other boys at the farm trust. Sam believes in giving everyone second chances and that if people want to change then it is up to them. The institution can change one for better or worse but it’s up to the persona to allow the change, so if they refuse the tools the institution provides them with, then they will stay the same. The farm as an institution has a positive impact on Brett, because once he starts taking responsibility for his actions then he changes. “…He didn’t want to be here. It was a waste of time…” through the use of third person narration the responders are able to see that Brett’s attitude towards the institution as a whole is that, he believes that this institution is a waste of his time as he believes it isn’t going to help him. Later on in the novel Brett comes to realisation after Josh opens up to him, Brett realises that he shouldn’t blame his actions on everyone else, and that he should take responsibility and live up to the consequences. The responders are able to see how much Brett has changed in the end of the novel when Brett admits that it was his fault that they broke up. “…I’m the one to blame!...” The exclamation mark…

    • 735 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    5. According to Angela Y. Davis the hegemonic understanding of prisons that non-incarcerated people get via various media outlets is based on the portrayal of prisons as necessary institutions that simultaneously keep drug addicts, the mentally ill, and violent individuals away from society. In a sense, prisons operate as a filtration system that can remove or obscure the unwanted members of society in order to maintain social integrity and order.…

    • 1197 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Scott Monk Raw Analysis

    • 1171 Words
    • 5 Pages

    However the effect of the institutions goes beyond the individual. The institution forces society to stereotype those who reside in them, depriving individuality and is supported through Mr Douglas in Raw, ‘it may have a fancy name, but it is still a jail for criminals,’ and Toby, in Girl Interrupted, ‘them’, ‘they’re eating grapes off the wallpaper’.…

    • 1171 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Raw by Scott Monk

    • 326 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Raw follows the story of Brett Dalton a teenager with an attitude who has succumb to peer pressure and lives outside the law. After being picked up for various minor offences Brett finds himself having to spend time at a rehabilitation centre. the image that I have created symbolises Brett Daltons perspective of the rehabilitation centre called the farm. The farm is home to many young crime committers such as Brett. The farms main purpose is to reform kids that are sent there. It is very different from most detention centres in regards that a lot of trust is given to the inmates. Brett was confused with this as his image of the farm was completely different as he states in the book “what kind of detention centre is this ? there weren’t any bars on the cells ? There weren’t even cells” the farm ran a much different way to which Brett thought which I have created in my image. My image helps to express the idea of how Brett sees the farm through his eyes. At the start of the novel Brett is considered as a rebel and feels that the whole world is against him and blames others for his troubles he has the perception that the farm will be full of guards and have locked gates and that it will never change who he is . Brett’s negativity towards authority is expressed in his antagonism towards the police but throughout the novel Brett comes to understand that not all power and authority is like that represented by police that power is non-merely vested in institution’s and authority figures but there are sensitive and compassionate individuals that through the book help Brett to regain control over his own destiny Although the farm does not successfully help Brett get out of trouble as he ends up in jail but he learns many lessons and that ‘he is the only one that can change who he…

    • 326 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Raw: Novel and Brett

    • 1030 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Institutions can have positive and negative effects that can alter and individual's perceptions, judgment and values. "Raw" by Scott Monk, "Hard Rock" by Etheridge Knight and "Dangerous Minds" by John N. Smith help communicate an understanding of how such institutions can reform an individual.…

    • 1030 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The reader will hear from current and former prisoners’ that explain their experiences. They discuss behavior, trouble they encountered, and their state of mind when they were free in society before heading down the wrong path. Their testimony is to educate readers on how…

    • 188 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    prison privatization policy

    • 2129 Words
    • 14 Pages

    (8) Morris, Norval and David J. Rothman, eds. 1998. The Oxford History of the Prison: The Practice of Punishment in Western Society. New York: Oxford University Press.…

    • 2129 Words
    • 14 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    Upon entering a total institution, that individual is immediately stripped of all self-identifying support that they gained from the outside world. Upon arrival, an individual goes through a process that Goffman describes as a series of abasements, degradations, humiliations, and profanations of self, and they are often systematically mortified (Goffman, 1961). The barrier that the institution puts in place between the individual and the outer world is one restriction of self that the individual looses. This can lead into role dispossession. Many institutions initial withhold visitation rights, in order to ensure that the individual has a clean break from past roles. This causes the inmate to continue to loose more sense of self because they are no longer associated with the roles that they once had outside of the total…

    • 1776 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The life in the prison changes his state of mind and how he differentiates between good and bad. It made him a man with no rules, who is free to do whatever he wants, and gave him the right to murder people because he was not…

    • 1374 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Prison experiences are shared by those who spent much time behind the bars and most of the experiences shared exemplify how cruel the prison system really was showing that no rehabilitation was occurring due to an excess in punishment. The Los Angeles Times published an article, “Cruel and Usual Punishment in Jails and Prisons,” in which ex-prisoners were interviewed and shared stories of their time in prison, many of which showed how corrupt prisons have truly become. The stories described prisons as appalling and cruel, one prisoner describe being handcuffed every day to his bunk while he had to remain only in his underwear, another prisoner described how it was to live in a cell located directly under broken toilet pipes for weeks resulting…

    • 349 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Prison is for those who fail to abide by the laws that society lays out. Though the individuals fail to comply by the rules of being a member of society, they are still the responsibility of the government. Mass amounts of tax payer dollars go into maintaining prison facilities and making sure they have the necessary programing and resources they need to keep the risk of re-offense as minimal as possible. This is the case in Canada; however, other countries around the world have different views on how prisoners are to be treated. Canadian judicial systems focus on the rehabilitation of the countries offenders; this can be seen throughout the different variations of programs in the country’s prison facilities. These programs are present in order to help the offenders with issues they may have that lead them to offend. This is to ensure that they receive the treatment they need in order to once again become functioning and law abiding members of society. This says a lot about how Canada is governed; by the way Canada treats its prisoners, its simple to see that this is a country of forgiveness rather that punishment. Fyodor Dostoevsky once stated “You can judge a society by how well it treats its prisoners”. This statement is correct as it can be seen that there in fact is a correlation between how well governed a society is. Countries with similar incentives for their prisoners as Canada, such as Sweden and its other Scandinavian neighbours tend to be more peaceful and have better international relations throughout the world. The complete opposite can be said for those…

    • 2205 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The purpose of this paper is to seek incarceration in society by addressing who what how when and where, on the subject of matter. My argument of the United States population being sheltering in warehouse of society known as the penitentiary system is wrong. United States’ prison population are the worst despite economy and structure systems. I will research supporting arguments from articles I found from scholarly sources and popular sources from the internet for you to challenge my argument and hopefully agree with me and if not then go on to more discussion on other topics to argue against…

    • 1053 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Adult Prisons

    • 2156 Words
    • 9 Pages

    For instance, prison behavior have a big effect of the development of the juveniles because it includes many misconducts such as threats, fights, or assaulting a prison official or other inmates. (Shook 3). This shows bad conditions of the environment that it is poorly equipped which will delay the development of the youth’s behavior. It also proves that the juveniles are always in danger and they wouldn't know what to do since they’re not experienced in this type of environment. Since the adults are way experienced, they have a big advantage to abuse the kids. Another example, the adolescents development of the prison environment confines levels of intimidation or abuse, stressful conditions, and problematic relationships with the prison staff which decreases the youth’s maturity level than adults. (Shook 6). For this reason, the juveniles are nowhere to be safe because it’s not a good way to change the kids due to the poor conditions. In which, this will reflect on the offender's actions to repeat bad behavior and actions again. At this point it starts to get intense because there’s a letter from a 15-year old boy, named Paul Jensen, imprisoned in South Dakota State Penitentiary to his sentencing judge. He said, “Judge Zinter, I have an important question to ask you! Would you please move me out of here? Please don’t leave me here with all…

    • 2156 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The Lucifer Effect

    • 10294 Words
    • 42 Pages

    aroused, amplified, or manipulated by situational forces that we fail to recognize as potent. This is why evil is so pervasive. Its temptation is just a small turn away, a slight detour on the path of life, a blur in our sideview mirror, leading to disaster. In trying to understand the character transformations of the good young men in the Stanford Prison Experiment, I previously outlined a number of psychological processes that were pivotal in perverting their thoughts, feelings, perceptions, and actions. We saw how the basic need to belong, to associate with and be accepted by others, so central to community building and family bonding, was diverted in the SPE into conformity with newly emergent norms that enabled the guards to abuse the prisoners. We saw further that the basic motive for consistency between our private attitudes and public behavior allowed for dissonant commitments to be resolved and rationalized in violence against one's fellows.…

    • 10294 Words
    • 42 Pages
    Powerful Essays