My two novels, Divergent and The Maze Runner, have many similarities that I would like to discuss. Firstly, both novels focused on being thrust into a brand new world that the characters were not used to. Thomas(The Maze Runner protagonist)started off the book with him waking up inside of a cargo box, traveling upwards at an incredibly high speed, and with only the memory of his name. When Tris decided to join the Dauntless, she immediately had to adapt and change, from jumping from trains and buildings to fighting someone until submission or decommission. To add onto that, despite being both unfamiliar with their new lives, they were able to adapt fairly quickly with Tris being first in the second and third round of initiation, and …show more content…
Thomas started from a person who was scared, confused, and curious, into the one who led them out of the maze and one of the most important Gladers. On the other hand, Tris was a quiet Abnegation girl who was struggling to fit into Dauntless. Eventually though she became one of the bravest people in the story, fending off multiple Dauntless soldiers and stopping the Erudite. There were also, quite obviously, going through very different situations. While, Tris had to fight her way to the top ten, hide her Divergence, and save an entire faction, Thomas was trying to figure out what his flashbacks meant, how he could get out of the maze, and why he had so much responsibility. Based on all of this information, I believe that dystopian fiction really seems to focus on themes of sacrifice, friendship, and most important of all, overthrowing “the system”. For example, another dystopian fiction novel that has all three of these themes is The Hunger Games. In the Hunger Games, Katniss, the protagonist, risks her life for her sister’s wellbeing, makes alliances with other tributes and rebels, and attempts to overthrow the Capitol. The main plot point of Divergent was to stop the Erudite, the most power-hungry of all five factions. Finally, Thomas stops WICKED, a group of scientists that experimented on the Gladers. During all three of these dystopian fiction novels the protagonists and their friends
Anthem and The Maze Runner is filled with conflict. In The Maze Runner characters are forced to live in a maze. The Maze Runner and Anthem compare and contrast in conflict with themselves, government, and rankings.This shows a dystopia because people are forced to do things they don't want to do. Furthermore details on the conflicts are needed to understand.
Anthem and The Maze Runner are both dystopian society based books that teens like to read because they can relate to them and they like how twisted they are.
The book The Maze Runner and the book Anthem both show how much people will go through to escape something they hate. James Dashner writs on how much Thomas the main character wants to escape; Ayn Rand also writes how much Equality wants to escape to learn. Later on in the books both Equality and Thomas both feel freedom. Even though, the two books are similar in some ways the happy ending of Anthem is in contrast of the hanging ending of The Maze Runner
It was once said that “It does not do to dwell on dreams and forget to live”. Though this quote originally comes from a children’s book, the idea of fantasy being used to escape from a harsh reality is something found in numerous fictional works. The film Pan’s Labyrinth and the novel The Little Friend by Donna Tartt both incorporate the theme of escapism through fantasy as a method of coping with tragedy and show, through this theme, both the positive side of fantasy as well as the darker side.
In today 's society, equality is a big deal, with many people still fighting for their rights. People all over the world are still being discriminated against, a topic that is not uncommon for a vast amount of dystopian novels. In fact, it 's a very common theme for multiple dystopian pieces. Scott Westerfeld 's Uglies, Joelle Charbonneau 's The Testing, Liam Hughes ' The Social Classes, Kurt Vonnegut Jr. 's Harrison Bergeron, and Wes Ball 's interpretation of The Maze Runner all have social discrimination integrated into their story lines. Despite the many problems in dystopian societies, authors also present the classic hero that rises above those issues and works to rebuild their government or community. However, a hero isn 't just born, they 're made through a series of events such as problems with social class discrimination.
“It may be unfair, but what happens in a few days, sometimes even a single day, can change the course of a whole lifetime…” (Kite Runner, Hosseini,142) This quote was said to Amir in the Kite Runner, however, this quote applies across all literature. Including A Thousand Splendid Suns.
The idea of playing God is a strong theme throughout science fiction and portrays different effects in various works. One of the first characters to accomplish this is Victor Frankenstein in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein. Another character of science fiction recognized to do this is Dr. Tyrell from Blade Runner. These men played God and created a new form of life, but for different reasons and different results.
The famous book The Maze Runner by James Smith Dashner, is the famous story about a young man named Thomas who wakes up in the middle of a metallic box that serves as an elevator with no memory of his past, the box opens up to a place called “the Glade” with 60 other boys staring back at him as he tries to run away pass them. Every thirty days a new boy or supplies arrive from the box and for three years they have lived together trying to find clues through the maze that surrounds them; but as they start losing hope it all changes when something unprecedented happens and a girl along with a note arrive through the box. The book along with amazing imagery and relevance to today’s world manages to attract more than just teenagers but anybody that is up for the challenge of the maze, and that is just the purpose of this paper to demonstrate multiple reason of why this book not only deserves to be read but it should hold a place in the literary canon.
The Maze Runner, written by James Dashner is the first book in the Maze Runner pentalogy. The story follows the adventures of a sixteen-year-old boy named Thomas, who finds himself waking up in the heart of a labyrinth, titled ‘The Glade’. As it turns out there are many teenage boys accompanying Thomas. The aim is to escape from the labyrinth, but this does not go as effortlessly as it sounds, due to the fact that the labyrinth is constructed by the inexplicable and threatening WICKED (World In Catastrophe Killzone Experiment Department). At nightfall, the walls of the labyrinth move and barricade the four entrances of the labyrinth. The walls prevent the boys from being attacked by creatures called grievers, who walk around the labyrinth every night. Survival intuition, faith and friendship are some of the themes portrayed in the book. In the film adaptation of The Maze Runner, there are three highly visible differences in comparison to the book. In the first place, Dashner delightfully depicts the thought processes of the protagonist in the book, whilst in the film this is not portrayed at all. Secondly, the time frame of the film is diminished, which makes the story less plausible. Lastly, the strong characters Dashner developed for the books are nullified in the film adaptation. Therefore,
In The Maze Runner it doesn’t say how they went in the tree fort to look at the whole village. Instead Alby just gives his tour for Thomas. I knew that the book would be a lot more descriptive so it did match my expectations in the book. I like the movie more because it shows how the runners were more tired. I feel like the characters were described a lot differently than they did in the movie.
The Hunger Games takes place in a post-civil-war country that has been divided into 12 districts. Katniss Everdeen lives in district 12 and competes in the yearly Hunger Games. She is not given a choice in this matter. Once she wins, she rebels against the government and fights to fix the districts. Divergent, a series by Veronica Roth, is a failed Utopia where each person has to choose which faction they want to be a part of for the rest of their life. Tris chooses Dauntless, and then discovers she is Divergent, a rare trait that could lead to being disowned by her society. This helps her to rebel against the government that is controlling people in her faction.
In the book Divergent by Veronica Roth a young girl named Tris who decides her fate against her parents will. As the cities around her turn to war Tris must stick by her friends and do what is right. Similar yet different, in the book The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins a young girl named Katniss takes the place of her sister in an annual war between 11 other districts. Katniss must choose between her well being and the wellbeing of the people she loves. In this essay readers learn how both books express similarities and differences in the theme, the setting, as well as the usage and meaning of symbolism.
The terrifying nature of freedom causes individuals to assimilate into society out of fear. Societies thus take advantage of this by oppressing individuals to maintain stability. In George Orwell’s 1984, which is based on a rundown city called Oceania, the proles always accept everything that the party tells them without any questions. They let the government completely control their lives without hesitation. The Maze Runner by James Dashner also exhibits oppressive environments and individuals who accept these societies. In the Maze Runner, the people in the maze are all trapped in a maze, limiting where they can go and what they can do. Both 1984 and The Maze Runner exhibit the oppressive nature of society and how accepting to be controlled
The Hunger Games, directed by Gary Ross, and Maze Runner, directed by Wes Ball, are films with similar themes such as heroism, dystopian world and sacrifice. Both films involve killing of innocent lives by authorities in charge as a mean to find peace. The Maze Runner is about finding a cure of civilisation whilst the The Hunger Games uses the competitions in order to control the population and prevent an uprising. Katniss in the film is a 16 year old girl who volunteers as a tribute in the competition. Thomas is also a 16 year old Glader who was forced to be inside the maze by the Creators. The themes and filming techniques used by Gary Ross and Wes Ball in both in their will be compared in order to see the similarities. There are two
Readers, especially teenagers, can imagine themselves in the world in which the dystopian character lives and feel like they are actually in the story. This concept makes it easy for them to relate to the main character. Teenagers love to read dystopian fiction because it's exciting and interesting! Young adults and teenagers nowadays love the thrill, excitement, and adventure dystopian novels and movies bring. For example The Maze Runner series, are action filled books that will bring any reader suspense. The Maze Runner is a fast-paced adventure set in a cruel and violent post-apocalyptic world. The protagonist, Thomas is a strong role model who does not fall easily into peer pressure or give up his own sense of what's right. Part of the attraction of The Maze Runner is that it is a world in which teenage boys inhabit, a world with no adults, and the boys make their own rules. The teens in the Maze Runner are stranded in a huge Maze and arrive from a box with no memories at all, but they are still aware on some level that they are being held captive and endangered by adults, or the suspicious” creators”. Some of the teens in the Maze go insane from fear, the attacks of the monster-like Grievers, and the memory of the world they left behind. With all the events that occur in an adolescent’s life, dystopian novels like the Maze Runner are