"Literary criticism in a clockwork orange" Essays and Research Papers

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    It was whilst reading The Clockwork Orange that I met a protagonist who as unapologetically evil and I was fascinated‚ it led me to discover more literature that dealt with the darker side of human existence; literature that explored the transgressive and subversive. My curiosity for the morbid and dark only grew through my reading of novels like American Psycho‚ Frankenstein‚ Naked Lunch and Lolita; novels which tried to describe something wholly alien yet contain something I found familiar. Unlike

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    “You men need to tuck away your penises and surrogate penises (guns)‚ because you will never get anywhere with them. Masculinity is a myth and a dead end.” - Stanley Kubrick Stanley Kubrick’s 1971 classic A Clockwork Orange is an interesting beast. The film has been vilified‚ banned‚ condemned on artistic grounds and yet it survives. The film’s hallucinatory visuals depicting a strange‚ narcissistic modernistic society‚ steeped in seventies art deco and harsh‚ contrasting lighting‚ paint a

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    A clockwork orange essay

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    infrequently will a book be published that weaves these fields together as well as A Clockwork Orange‚ by Anthony Burgess.  In this Book Burgess speculated on the fact “the significance of maturing by choice is to gain moral values and freedoms.”  He achieved this task by pushing his angsty teenaged character‚ Alex‚ through situations that challenge the moral values of himself and his friends.   In the novel‚ A Clockwork Orange‚ by Anthony Burgess‚ Alex himself‚ must choose good over evil in order to gain

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    A Clockwork Orange novel

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    A Clockwork Orange is a 1971 British film adapted from Anthony Burgess’ A Clockwork Orange novel written in 1962. The film is about a mischievous and troubled young man named Alex de Large. Alex and his gang of friends enjoy causing harm and watching others suffer. They run around London at night and commit random acts of robbery and rape. Alex‚ as the ringleader of all the madness‚ gets caught by the police and is sent to prison. While Alex is in prison‚ scientists study his violent behavior. The

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    reject the majority through acts of defiance‚ self-alienation and rebellion. This notion is extensively explored within Peter Skrzynecki’s poem‚ St. Patrick’s College‚ from the anthology Immigrant Chronicle‚ and Stanley Kubrick’s 1971 film A Clockwork Orange as both texts illustrate the protagonist’s limited experience of belonging through their interaction with others

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    to school and have a part time job to make money. As we would think school‚ having a job‚ working for yourself is good for you. In a Clockwork Orange everything is switched around. Basically what the young adults find good is like robbing stores‚ raping women on the street‚ having gang fights‚ the good old ultra violence. Satire: The dystopia of A Clockwork Orange has a very satirical tone. The aspect of satire in the novel is in the form of political commentary. Alex and his gang deprive the community

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    Nadine Gordimer‚ South African writer and Nobel Prize winner‚ said that penetrating fiction doesn’t give answers‚ it invites questions. This quote is accurately reflected in Anthony Burgess’ novel‚ A Clockwork Orange‚ in which many questions and moral values are explored. Burgess strongly believed that humans’ ability of choice is the only factor distinguishing us between animals or machines. The two most predominant recurring themes of and questions relating to the novel involve ‘good vs evil’

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    A Clockwork Orange “A Clockwork Orange” is a profound and somewhat disturbing tale of the ultraviolet future of the human race. Its setting is in the near future‚ most likely sometime in the early twenty-first century. With this fictional society‚ Burgess depicts a totalitarian state that incorporates elements of both Soviet communism and American capitalism. Like most of the story’s genre‚ dystopian fiction‚ Burgess’ novel can be characterized as a logical extension of contemporary conditions rather

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    facade of belonging‚ as it restrains our freedom and forces us to only mimic. My studied texts show how society demands us to conform‚ yet conformity prevents a sense of true identity being ever created. This notion is elaborated in the novel‚ A Clockwork Orange. Alex is a criminal who doesn’t belong anywhere within society. In the novel‚ the government attempts to suppress his criminality by physically preventing him from thinking of violence—thus making him conform to their standards. This is a prime

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    Many of us like to think that humanity as a whole is progressing to a better future where we will live united and in peace with one another. Nevertheless‚ there are those among us that do not share these beliefs. In A Clockwork Orange‚ by Anthony Burgess‚ a futuristic world is turned upside down and in shambles. This 1962 classic is a frightful depiction of what our society could become and possibly‚ what it already is. Drugs almost seem to be legal and unregulated and subsequently are widely used

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