The Giver Essays

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    characters and more realistic situations. However, what do they all have in common? They live in stories. Two stories that are interesting are The Giver by Lois Lowry and "The Scarlet Ibis" by James Hurst. The protagonist in The Giver is Jonas, who has taken on a role of being the new Giver. He receives memories from the past, through the old Giver, to help their futuristic community make decisions. Whereas, the main character in "The Scarlet Ibis" is Brother. He has a physically challenged brother

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    Color In The Giver

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    More to Color Than Meets the Eye In his 2014 film The Giver, director Phillip Noyce creates a society much different from the world that exists now. He implements an idea that as long as everything and everyone is equal, that there is “sameness,” then no disputes or contention will ever happen. To do this, he eliminates all qualities that makes someone or something unique from society. The people in charge, the Elders, rule over their confined world and enforce rules that require citizens to take

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    Originality In The Giver

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    The Giver by: Derrick Bell In the book The Giver by Lois Lowry, a boy named Jonas learned about the lessons of originality. His world is very different from ours. Our world has color, religion, and freedom, but Jonas’s world doesn’t. Two themes that apply to my life and The Giver are “Originality is important” and “Freedom is just as important as security.” The biggest theme in The Giver is “Originality is important.” Everyone in the story is the same except Jonas and the Giver. Jonas and

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    Identity In The Giver

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    Colors, individuality, freedom, the ability to make choices. Imagine a world where none of this exists. Are you finding it hard to believe? Welcome to Jonas’s community. Lois Lowry’s awarding winning book The Giver is set in a dystopian future that looks as though nothing bad could ever happen. The main protagonist, Jonas, is a boy who has light eyes which makes him a bit different from his community. Jonas is selected for a job that is given high respect. The Receiver of Memory. As the story progressed

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    Lowry had inspiration for the character Jonas in her novel, The Giver. When writing, The Giver Lowry creates a dystopian society where the government has taken away the population’s ability to remember the past, see color, or have feelings. In the novel, Lois Lowry presents the protagonist and hero, Jonas. Jonas gets chosen to be the Receiver of Memory and his whole life changes. The current Receiver, an old man Jonas calls The Giver shows Jonas memories from the past that contain aspects ranging

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    The Giver Controversy

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    The Giver, written in 1993 by Lois Lowry, is a very widely debated book. Lois Lowry, originally Lois Ann Hammersberg, was born in Honolulu, Hawaii on March 20, 1937. When she became 19, she married a naval officer named Donald Lowry. She had four children, two daughters and two sons, before Lowry divorced her husband for a time. Lowry published many popular books throughout her life, including The Giver, Number the Stars, and the many novels about Anastasia Krupnik. Even though The Giver was popular

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    Symbolism In The Giver

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    The haunting story of The Giver centers on a young teenagers by the name of Jonas (actor Brenton Thwaites), a boy who lives in a rigidly controlled society sometime in the future. Jonas lives in a colorless realm that is a seemingly ideal world of conformity and contentment. The humans that inhabit this world deal with no evil; whether it be suffering, war, hunger or pain. At first glance it seems to be a “perfect world”. Controlled by “the elders”—rulers with laws of strict procedures—this society

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    The Giver Utopia

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    definition of a Utopia- “an imaginary and indefinitely remote place, a place of ideal perfection especially in laws,government,and social conditions” (Merriam-Webster).The book “The Giver” by Lois Lowry is about a boy named Jonas who lives a community of sameness where everybody doesn’t have feelings but Jonas and The Giver. Jonas’s community is a utopia because the people of the community each get a job, they never starve (basic needs), and they do not have feelings so they do not have pain, sadness

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    Memories In The Giver

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    In the novel, The Giver, it displays life in a world without memories and pain. This novel shows just how important memories are to us even if some of them aren’t the easiest to look back on. Life in the book is an utopia. It is a vision of a perfect world created by the creators. It has eliminated fear, pain, hunger, illness, and conflict for everyone that lives in the community as it is believed to be the best way for everyone to live. However, there is one person that is selected to hold all the

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    Allegory In The Giver

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    Allegorical messages appear often in the giver because they are broad with different meanings. The Giver is a book about a controlled community. This community is based upon sameness which means everything is the same. They have many rules and things like climate control to maintain the sameness. There are no individual birthdays either; at the end of the year all the babies born that year turn one whether they were born the week before or 5 months before, this also helps maintain sameness. When

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