"A Clockwork Orange" Essays and Research Papers

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    A Developmental Study of Alex in Kubrick’s A Clockwork Orange Synopsis of A Clockwork Orange In A Clockwork Orange‚ the main character is that of a mildly young child of 15 who‚ along with his fellow friends‚ or "Droogs"‚ partake in evenings of Ultra-Violence. Ultra Violence consists of random beatings‚ theft‚ destruction‚ and rape. The main character‚ Alex‚ is the self-proclaimed leader of the pack‚ and makes judgment on their actions pending on his mood. His Droogs eventually find themselves

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    A Clockwork Orange: Good Riddance to Bad Rubbish A Clockwork Orange received critical acclaim‚ made more than thirty million dollars at the box office‚ and was nominated for various awards; however‚ this esteemed film was outlawed from the nation of Great Britain in order to curb its immoral content from permeating society. Before all the controversy began‚ A Clockwork Orange was a novel‚ written mostly in Russian‚ by Anthony Burgess. Stanley Kubrick is known to critics as a film maker who probes

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    Plato finds that society can be easily consumed by the mimetic imagination‚ in which people are tricked into believing that the imaginary is reality. Plato’s condemnation of the mimetic imagination alludes to Stanley Kubrick’s postmodern film‚ A Clockwork Orange (1971)‚ which features a youth gang driven by images of sex‚ violence‚ and drug‚ set in a dystopian future Britain. Furthermore‚ Kubrick’s film resembles Plato’s Allegory of the Cave‚ as the prisoners of the imaginary are introduced to new realities

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    Clockwork Cruelty The names Stanley Kubrick and Antonin Artaud are ones that are not often‚ if ever‚ heard together in the same sentence. However‚ this does not mean they have nothing in common. In fact Kubrick ’s film A Clockwork Orange shares elements with Artaud ’s Theatre of Cruelty. This is seen in the disorienting use of language‚ visuals in which “violent physical images crush and hypnotize the sensibility of the spectator” (Cardullo‚ 375)‚ and in how the film ’s

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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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    bloom of a modern time anti-hero can be traced back to the period of Romanticism. Through the view of an anti-hero‚ we are ultimately challenged to look at ourselves and our contemporary world and recognise the complexity of human condition. In Clockwork Orange and Unforgiven‚ the dichotomist relationship between two protagonists Alex and Will Munny has demonstrated our deeper understanding of the notion of an anti-hero. Alex represents the common men chained by society and their own insignificance

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    Alexandra Martinez EL3510 :Literature Across Cultures II: Theory 4/26/13 amarti67@oldwestbury.edu A Clockwork Orange Essay Assignment The Ludovico Treatment The psychological conditioning treatment used in A Clockwork Orange ‚ the Ludovico treatment ‚ raises many moral issues. Is it justly to take a persons “free will” to make the world a safer place? In this paper I will discuss different perspectives from the novel‚ including my own reflection on the treatments moral effect on the novels

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    Alienation and Integration The Usage of Marked Language in “A Clockwork Orange” In Anthony Burgess’ novel „A Clockwork Orange“ from 1962‚ the author’s use of a newly created language[i]‚ Nadsat‚ plays a key role in the presentation of the main protagonist Alex DeLarge‚ and his schoolboy sociopathy. Corrupt and naive‚ 15-year-old Alex narrates his own story with a language that only the author and the characters in his fictional world could truly understand; specifically those characters among

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    A Clockwork Orange: Teaching Ethics through a Violent Criminal Every thirty seconds a new book comes out; in fact‚ reading just the titles of every book ever printed would take thirteen years (Hornby). Based on those kinds of numbers‚ deciding what books one should single out and read seems a task of enormous importance. Which books are significant enough that any person—all people being of such limited time—should go to the bother of reading? Which books best enrich the mind? There’s a rather

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    200:15 A Clockwork Orange Essay 5 Dec 2013 Malenky Machines: Off It Itties The decision to choose between good and evil is one simple choice that separates a human from being a machine. Being unable to choose from the two is “…like little chellovecks made out of tin and with a spring inside and then a winding handle on the outside” (Burgess‚ 203). There comes a point in a man’s life where he stops being a machine and becomes something else entirely. In the book A Clockwork Orange by Anthony

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