Have you ever been so mad, so angry that words can’t describe how rageful you are? You’re so blinded by anger, that you do or say something that you would’ve never do when you’re calm, you’re not in “monster” form. Some say that being a “monster” is just like being uncivil, that depends on you. Even the most civilized, well-mannered, polished, enlightened people will still have their moments of “monster” mode. Well the definition of civilized is to bring (a place or people) to a stage of social, cultural, and moral development considered to be more advanced, meaning that whatever you think is socially, morally, or culturally advance is civil. The definition of uncivilized is (of a place or people) not considered to be socially, culturally, …show more content…
When people become enraged they go “monster” mode as society views it. To paint a picture it’s like Bruce Banner and The Hulk, you have Banner who is a human, he’s like you and me, when enraged Banner becomes the Hulk, a monster. Banner is so blinded by rage that he literally turns into a monster, we are non-fictional people, we don’t actually turn into big, green, things, we just say and do things that we would never really do when we are calm, we figuratively turn into a monster. Raab stated, “hold of this letter opener, or even now try very slowly to slide the revolver out”,(“Monster at a Window”12-14), the “civil” person would put the gun and letter opener down and taken the high road. They knew by pulling the trigger or pulling out the letter opener, they were compromising their morals for nothing. Raab continued, “But none of this will happen…you compose yourself.”(25), he stopped and thought to himself that he couldn’t he had to compose himself and be “civil”, he had to take the high road. Earlier I said, “whatever you think is socially, morally, or culturally advance is civil.”, so you may think that this person was actual uncivil, it’s up to you, I’m just telling how the poem has
This relates to Orr’s experience during the civil rights movement, when he witnesses an act of injustice. Orr shares “watching the scene, I felt murderous rage fill my whole being, geysering up in the single second it took to see what seemed about to happen. I became nothing but the impulse to scramble to my feet, grab the guard’s pistol before he knew what was happening, and shoot him as many times as possible. You would be their sudden and absolute target ” (222). Orr depicts his experience in a prison cell, as he watches a guard try to force a young boy to swallow a pin. He notices the injustice and begins to feel uncontrollable rage spread throughout him, his initial response is anger, not sorrow or pity. In a situation such as this, one can agree that Orr’s initial response is reasonable, that feeling “murderous rage” is acceptable because of the injustice he is witnessing. The rage he feels in that moment, leads him to thinking about acting out violently. When involved in a movement, it becomes difficult for emotions to be separated from the cause, especially when facing injustices because this often provokes rage and violence. But, in making amends, violence never helps the cause and should be avoided to advance forward because it uplifts more problems and suppresses the actual dilemma. Another form of violence occurred “In Newtown, Conn., where 26 people were killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School in 2012, hundreds of students at Newton High school gathered in a parking lot near the football field” (6). The main weapon used to engage in violence is the gun. This violence causes a staggering number of deaths and injuries throughout the world is needed. That’s why a strict gun control policy that would nearly abolish guns and make the world a safer place. Another big issue is children and teens getting hurt or killed with guns. ADD SOMETHING TO TRANSITION TO TALKING ABOUT
What does civilized mean? Civilized is a person who is well educated. Are hunter civilized?
Many studies have been conducted to determine the reason otherwise nonviolent people can commit vehement actions against another human: otherwise innocent people have proven to be capable of the most unimaginable of acts after being caught up in their actions. Maxine Kumin’s poem, “Woodchucks,” indirectly addresses this issue by presenting a metaphor of a woodchuck infestation being controlled by a fanatical hunter. The poem can either be interpreted to recount a simple, meaningless woodchuck hunt or to serve as a representation of the manners by which people can be overcome by desires for violence. Though a reader might at first overlook the violent genocidal references throughout the poem, after a thorough analysis
Regardless of how civilized people are, given certain surrounding environmental circumstances, can produce changes in human nature to the point where they can turn into savages.
The speaker is camouflaging compelling emotions with external civility. While the hiding of true feelings is an everyday
In modern society, violence is unquestionably looked down upon. With any type of inhumane abuse, there is a strict set of laws in place to protect victims. However, this was not always the case. In Octavia Butler’s book Kindred, she does not hesitate in intensely describing the unjust and violent exploitation of power by white people against blacks within the 1800’s. Even more so, she uses violence as a dominant theme throughout the entire novel. As always, a sensitive topic like full out physical abuse is hard to handle for some readers, and that makes people question whether the prevalent violent theme in Kindred was truly necessary. Without violence,
The reader will sympathize with the monster and instantly direct ill of mankind dealing with the monster in such a bad way. The monster is initially kind and has no bad intentions, but because of how people treat him, he will become angry. "The whole village came to his feet, some fled, others attacked me, until I, badly wounded by stones and other missiles, fled into the open country, and anxiously sought shelter in a miserable hut that was completely empty and seemed miserable after the palace I beheld in the village." (Page 103)
Rory Miller once said, “The only defense against evil, violent people is good people who are more skilled at violence”. What he means by this is that everyone has a sense of violence in them, but some people choose not to express it, but under circumstances it’s a man eat man world. The prisoners in the book, Night by Elie Wiesel, were nice regular people before they were put in camps and at the beginning, but as time passed by they were being deprived of food and every human need, they started to change. They became more aggressive and violent. In certain situation people change, they will start worrying about themselves and only themselves.
McCarthy’s novel, Blood Meridian, is an interesting story about a boy who grows up in the chaos of the world, but unlike most authors, McCarthy, creates a more complete image of humanity. McCarthy includes violence and barbarism as a natural part of who we are as humans. The protagonist, the kid, grew up with a father who was a drunken teacher who did not care for him or teach him how to read or write. The kid was not taken care of, wasn’t shown love, and wasn’t given love; therefore he did not know how to care or what being taken care of was. In the very first pages of the novel, McCarthy constructs a violent image of the kid by stating, “… in him broods already a taste for violence” (McCarthy 3). McCarthy uses this quote as a starting point
Humanity has always strived to become more “civilized”. Whether it was the manipulation of fire, the domestication of animals, the invention of electricity or the exploration of space, the goal has always been to become more advanced than our predecessors. We think of “civilization” as the opposite of “brutality” and we associate the former with peace and the latter with violence. For this reason, we are unable to deem a race that has walked on the moon as a “violent” race. However, “civilization” doesn’t abolish violence it simply removes the individual’s right to be violent and bestows it into the hands of a separate entity (like the military). (Lancaster)
Violence in the short story is very interesting because its so apparent and yet so deep. Towards the end of the story, the Misfit says to Grandmother “She would of been a good woman . . . if it had been somebody there to shoot her every minute of her life.” Flannery O’Connor doesn’t say that being exposed to violence makes them better people, but the message is clear: violence changes us as a people (both in the story and in the real world). Up until the very end, each member of the family, mostly Grandmother, acted egotistically and only focused in herself. None of the characters take a minute to evaluate whats right and wrong for themselves or anyone else. They all react based on their instincts without thinking things through so much. But when Grandmother is put in a life or death situation where she’s forced to carefully pick her words and actions, she is suddenly capable of a being more selfless and spiritually sound. The Grandmother’s everyday considerations probably have nothing to do with her son or the kids, really anyone in her family, but when she is faced with her own mortality she has this moment of “grace”—she calls the Misfit her own son, and reach makes an effort, emotionally and physically, hoping to save herself or comfort him. In the end, however, the Grandmother’s moment of “grace” ends up getting her killed. O’Connor
In the story, “The Most Dangerous Game” it portrays how enlightened individuals will turn uncouth if life relies upon it. First off, civilized is being educated more and being a good person who understands and respects others and themselves. Individuals in the story begin civilized, at that point end up plainly savage, particularly if life relies upon it. But being savage doesn’t necessarily mean that you aren’t civilized. Not all civilized people are nice, kind, and you know, civil. They have a bad side. Everyone does. Some people just may not notice it.Rainsford thinks of himself as civilized because he doesn’t murder he hunts and I agree with him.
The monster is practically human in his want for love and fraternity. Since his creation, he is dismissed and abused by everybody he meets, including his creator. It is his depression and dismissal by the public that makes him so malevolent. The main individual who at first acknowledged him as a helpless being who required comprehension was De Lacey, and it was on the grounds that he was visually impaired and in this way, did not pass judgment on the monster by appearances. "Nothing could exceed the love and respect which the younger cottagers exhibited towards their venerable companion. They performed towards him every little office of affection and duty with gentleness; and he rewarded them by his benevolent smiles"(page 101) The monster learns good habits with looking these people, and their experiences daily which, then, he has resentment towards his creator, that he is eviler in his behavior than the monster with his appearances.
By popular thinking of that day, disorientating violence exacted on the community can only be dealt with through an equal and opposite reaction of violence toward the exacter. An old saying throughout Europe goes ‘Do not hunt monsters, lest you wish to become one yourself.’ Yet, his order and disorder themes lend greatly to the senses of symbolism in the story.
He used different body parts of dead people to create the crazy monster. What changed the monster to be vicious was the fact that he was left alone and made to cope on his own because his master had left him behind. This monsters appearance also made him to be as angry and vicious as he turned out to be. What critics ended up arguing is if the monster was made to be very angry and mean or he was created that way. The surrounding factors of the monsters surroundings was believed to be the reason behind his anger and violence. This is evident in the novel where the monster camps outside a house and learns how to interact with humans through watching how they behave and learning their speech. This is a sign that the monster wanted to be one with the people and not be an outcast but he was battered and beaten when he tried interacting with the family. This was the final straw that set the monster