"The giver epilogue" Essays and Research Papers

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    Why The Giver? There are books being banned and challenged all over the country. To challenge a book means that a person or group of people try to limit its access to children/readers but are not successful. A banned book means that a certain book that had been challenged was successfully removed and prohibited from being sold. Lois Lowry’s The Giver tells a story about a young boy named Jonas who lives in a dystopian society. Everything in Jonas’s world is controlled‚ even death and emotions

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    similarities and differences of overwhelming personal adversity in Animal Farm by George Orwell and The Giver by Lois Lowry will be discussed. Napoleon does not enjoy the idea of having a democratic government so he chooses to exile snowball to start a dictatorship. The selfishness in napoleon’s leadership is contrasted to the hardship that Jonas must face when refusing to submit to the dictator’s figure of the Giver. The right has been given to Jonas to receive memories before “sameness”‚ which is very similar

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    The Giver by Lois Lowry and Brave New World by Aldous Huxley have many similarities. They both take place in futuristic utopias where happiness is the overall goal. Jonas and Bernard‚ the major characters in the novels‚ are both restless individuals who want change. Despite the close similarities‚ there are many contrasts in the two novels. The childhood‚ family‚ and professions arrangements are differently portrayed in the similar novels The Giver and Brave New World. <br> <br>The similarities in

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    that there is no such thing as a perfect society. The closest thing to a perfect society is the dystopian society in The Giver. Although‚ there are some similarities between the society in The Giver and the society in modern day‚ there are many more differences. First and foremost‚ jobs is one difference between the society in The Giver and the society in modern day. In The Giver‚ the citizens are assigned jobs. On page 27 in the novel‚ it stated‚ “There was no doubt that Benjamin would receive his

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    Movies and books are always different; in a movie you can show multiple characters‚ and in most books you’re stuck in one character’s narrative. For instance in the book The Giver the character Fiona doesn’t care about Jonas as deeply as she does in the movie. In the movie she stops her injections‚ and she starts to love Jonas. However in the book she only “enjoys having Jonas’s company”. In the movie she also helps Jonas steal Gabe before he is killed‚ and she is put in the community jail for helping

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    The worlds in “The Giver” book and movie are similar and different in many ways. The movie doesn’t stay very true to the book but makes the story more interesting to watch. The movie still holds true to the main story as the book‚ but just adds some more exciting and dramatic moments. Here some of those similarities and differences. There are numerous similarities between the worlds in “The Giver” book and movie. Firstly‚ the setting in the book and the movie is pretty similar. The community

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    Comparing and Contrasting The Giver and The Prophet of Yonwood The definition of dystopia is "an imagined place or state in which everything is unpleasant or bad‚ typically a totalitarian or environmentally degraded one." The definition of utopia is "an imagined place or state of things in which everything is perfect." Many dystopian communities are created while trying to make utopian ones. Both The Giver and The Prophet of Yonwood are both dystopian. Just because both of these books are dystopian

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    In the Novel The Giver‚ the author‚ Lois Lowry‚ presents a young boy named Jonas living in a world that is full of conformity and no choices allowed. In the community which Jonas lives‚ everyone is assigned a job and is disciplined when they do something wrong. Along the way Jonas learns he has a special type of Job as the Receiver of memories and he has special advantages he learns and wants to give people in the community to have choices. Lowry argues that over conformity is detrimental and the

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    The book‚ ‘The Giver’‚ by Lois Lowry is a novel depicting a society where standards and rules are everything. Citizens of the community aren’t allowed to pick a single thing on their own: from the clothes they wear‚ to the assignments (jobs) they will work they rest of their lives. The community has been blindsided for years‚ and is highly unaware of the the pick-n-choose world they are missing out on. Consider that our current government had announced they were planning on recreating a population

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    English: Discuss how Lois Lowry creates different worlds in texts that comment on our own world in the novel‚ The Giver. | The Giver Essay | Cameron MacKay14/11/2010 | | Lois Lowry’s highly acclaimed children’s novel The Giver‚ constantly refers to important themes in the storyline to portray messages of morality to the reader. These are conveyed through themes in the book. Some of these themes such as the expression of Individuality‚ the issue of Euthanasia‚ and the Customs and Rules

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