In The Giver, the image Lowry sets is lifeless. For example, when Jonas asks The Giver about him noticing objects change, The Giver gives him the answer of color: “Before my time, before the previous time, back and back and back. We relinquished color…”(93). The setting is only black and white and no one has emotions. The people have never felt melancholy, overjoyed, or loved, this sets a robotic icon, due to them lacking emotions. Without emotions they don’t truly get to have a choice in anything. If someone were to steal one of their belongings they wouldn’t have the opportunity to have the emotion of anger, or the person who had taken the object, guilt. They don’t get a choice in articles of clothing they wear, as a result…
What if people lived in a world where there was no cultures, no religion, no languages, no races, a world where everything was the same? In the futuristic world of the Giver all the people wear graym with the same haircut and no colors. Although some people may claim the world in the fiction novel The Giver by Lois Lowry is a utopia, it is a dystopia because sameness means there is no diversity which takes away from being human. Although sameness solves many of this world’s problems, it is not worth giving up diversity. In the story, as Jonas continues with his training he starts a conversation with The Giver about sameness. The Giver says “It wasn’t practical so it became obsolete when we went sameness. (...) Trucks; buses, slowed them down.…
I am writing a paper on the similarities of the setting between two books, The Giver and Gathering Blue both by the same author Lois Lowry. To start off, in both of the books they have annual gatherings each year that start in the morning, are multiple hours long, have lunch and resting breaks and continue into the afternoon. During these gatherings or celebrations the celebrate their past and their maturity and age. Another likeness is that they both have a committee of elders or the people that make most of the decisions for the community. The elders create the rules, decide whether they will be be realesed or sent to the field. Both of the communities have a special building, where the annual gathering is, where they hold trials, where the committee lives. The communities also share the idea of forgetting death, they both have a way of forgetting it, murmurs and not caring but in all it is supposed to be out of their minds and forgotten. In the books the author infers that it is in the future because there would have to be very high technology to do all of that stuff. In either community they do not want imperfect people, such as, twisted/broken anything, mental problems, hearing/vision loss, very weak, light, if they have anything of the above they will either be sent to the field or be released. Together what they both share is that there is no true love, yes they care about each other, they mourn when the die, they take care of each other, but they don’t really have feeling of love towards one another.…
Sameness is when everything is the same like color or personal lives. The community is by far a dystopia because there is complete control. There is also a lack of knowledge in the community, for instance no one has memories, they are all held by a person called the receiver of memories. Each family can also only have two books. In The Giver, by Lois Lowry, explains the ideas of sameness, complete control, and lack of knowledge.…
Chapter 1 and 2 in the giver, we found out that Jonas lives in an equal community. Jonas community encourages sameness, and discourages diversity. The community is unfair for the age for someone when they receive items and their family units. On page 13 lowry writes, “Two children — one male, one female — to each family unit. It was written very clearly in the rules.” This is very unfair for everyone because people like to be different, and not the same, but with this rule the citizens can’t. It’s dull being the same, for example, if you meet someone and they tell you about their family, you will already know if they have a brother or sister, depending on their gender. Another way everything is the even and the same is when the citizens…
In The Giver, Jonas starts out as an ordinary young boy with no significant positive traits. In the novel, Jonas shows no out of the ordinary characteristics. There have definitely been no outstanding achievements, or noble qualities presented. All that is given based on Jonas’ “personality”is Jonas’ obsession with correct language(Lowry 3). He shows a constant weariness and concern with his word choice and the word choices of others around him,…
Lois Lowry's award winning novel, The Giver, is set in a futuristic time where everyone lives in the world of sameness.The twelve year old protagonist, Jonas, along with his community, are forced to live in a world of sameness. When the kids in the community turn twelve they will be given jobs by the Committee of Elders. Jonas is given the job of being Receiver- a job in which Jonas will receive memories from the previous Receiver. From the memories Jonas learns colors, emotions and new and descriptive words. He quickly realizes how unfair it is that other people in his community can't see and feel the way he can. Everyone but Jonas and the previous Receiver are unaware on what they are missing out on. Therefore, sameness was a negative choice for the community.…
Just imagine a world where everything was the same all the time. Every day, the weather as plain and ordinary as the clothes you wear. This is the world perceived in The Giver. The Giver is a story of a boy named Jonas living in a dystopian society where everything is the same; the people, the homes, the weather. Though they have eliminated all fear, pain, war, and hatred, they have also eliminated choice. But when Jonas is chosen as Receiver, he must fight to bring choice, passion, joy, and love back to the hearts of his community. This type of society differs from modern society. The culture of current-day varies from the novel’s as well as its structure and values.…
Why does everyone in The Giver lack individuality? One could argue that there are many differences in citizens such as Assignments and physical attributes. However, those are two of the very few distinctions. In Lois Lowry’s book, The Giver, people are mostly the same which both creates and solves many societal issues.…
As we read The Giver, we gain a deeper appreciation for our society and how it doesn't physically force us to be all the same. Since sameness was applied to Jonas's community, he couldn't comprehend what color was. Memories and emotions he received from the Giver were all new experiences. Also, after seeing the release of a twin, Jonas realized that in order for human beings to have a mind consciousness, they need to have differences. As we advance into the future, we humans may lose our identities from the major technological leaps; and so, we have to be aware and not overdo things to the extent of us losing who we…
Imagine if everyone had the same house and the same bicycle. There would be no diversity. People would not be able to express themselves in the way that they wanted to, only the way that the government chose for them. Over time in “The Giver”, the inability to choose made the people of the community lack emotion. They did not care about what other people thought about them. For example, Jonas once said, “I certainly liked the memory, though. I can’t see why it’s your favorite. I couldn’t quite get the word for the whole feeling of it, the feeling that was so strong in the room.” Then the Giver replied to him, “Love”(157). This shows that until Jonas became the Receiver of Memory he was mostly incapable of having true emotions such as love, the strongest emotion on Earth. Only a fixed, controlling society could make others feel this way. It takes away the emotion, the love, the colors. It takes away what makes us…
" 'It wasn't a practical thing, so it became obsolete when we went to the Sameness.' " (84) The Giver, by Lois Lowry, is told from the perspective of a twelve-year-old boy named Jonas growing up in a Utopian society. At the Ceremony of Twelve,where every Twelve receives their life-long occupation. Jonas finds out he has been selected to be the Receiver of Memory, the most honored of Elders. The current Receiver, called Giver by Jonas, transfers memories of pain, joy, feelings, and color to him. As he receives each memory, he yearns for a life outside of the one he has been trapped in for so long. This book proves that being "perfect" is not as great as it sounds. The Sameness, what the Utopian society Jonas lives in was based upon, has no real benefits to the community because there are no feelings, no diversity, and no choices.…
The setting of “The Giver” is a utopian community that is part of a larger utopian society most likely on Earth. The time this takes place is an unspecified time in the future. Everyone in this community can not see color except for one person The Giver.…
The Giver highlights the importance of taking risks like escaping and trying to fend for himself and breaking the rules all to survive. Jonas took risks by. There were multiple times within the story that he forgets about himself…
In the world there are a lot of people, but nobody is the same. Every person looks different, maybe he has a black skin, green hair, is blind or deaf, but all humans have positive and negative characteristics.…