A Clockwork Orange Essay Topics

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A Clockwork Orange,

Imagine having stolen, raped, and even murdered all at the age of 15. The new canon of dark literature and controversy has finally hit the stage. A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess written in 1962 could only be described in the old cockney expression "queer as a clockwork orange". Meaning it is bizarre internally, but appears natural on the surface. The story begins with the protagonist and narrator Alex a 15–year–old boy, who sets the bar for the most cold–blooded and callous characters of literature. His droogs, Pete, Georgie and Dim, who was really dim, would spend their time in the Korova Milkbar drinking drug laced milk. After a good drink of the milk–plus mesto, Alex and his three droogs were ready to commit the good old...show more content...

Nadsat itself, symbolizes the adolescent stage of violence and would not give the same effect if it were not used. As Nixon states, "Nasdat also lends plausibility to the setting of the work as a whole; gives readers the option of distancing themselves from the violence in the novel; and prevents the novel from becoming dated" (15), gives each reader a different experience and have immense possibilities on how to view Alex as a character. The question of human morality has been discussed and argued for many years, andAnthony Burgess challenges the question of free will in A Clockwork Orange. First, what exactly is human morality? In a the journal of Strong Reciprocity and the Roots of Human Morality, clearly articulates the roots of morality: we argue that ethical behavior was п¬Ѓtness–enhancing in the years marking the emergence of Homo sapiens because human groups with many altruists fared better than groups of selп¬Ѓsh individuals, and the п¬Ѓtness losses sustained by altruists were more than compensated by the superior performance of the groups in which they congregated (Gintis, Henrich, Bowles, Boyd, Fehr 1).

Though our human nature is to be good, Alex is the complete opposite. Alex is suddenly backstabbed by his companions while robbing a woman's house, who he murdered that night. Alex was sent to Jail and sentenced to 4 years in prison. He soon found out about

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A Clockwork Orange is a novel about moral choice and free will. Alex's story shows what happens when an individual's right to choose is robbed for the good of society. The first and last chapters place Alex in more or less the same physical situation but his ability to exercise free will leads him to diametrically opposite choices–good versus evil. The phrase, "what's it going to be then, eh?," echoes throughout the book; only at the end of the novel is the moral metamorphosis complete and Alex is finally able to answer the question, and by doing so affirms hisfreedom of choice. The capacity to choose freely is the attribute that distinguishes...show more content...

The technique is a scientific experiment designed to take away moral choice from criminals. The technique conditions a person to feel intense pain and nausea whenever they have a violent thought. The key moral theme of A Clockwork Orange is articulated during a chat between the alcoholic prison chaplain and Alex two weeks before he enters treatment. He reflects on the moral questions raised by the treatment that will force Alex to be good. "Does God want goodness or the choice of goodness? Is a man who chooses the bad perhaps in some way better than a man who has the good imposed on him?" The government experiment fails to realize that good and evil come from within the self. The Ludovico Technique messes with Alex's internal clockwork. He transforms into a being that is unable to distinguish good from evil. The altering of his personality makes him, "as decent a lad as you would meet on a May morning, unvicious, unviolent...inclined to the kindly word and helpful act," but his actions are dictated only by self–interest to avoid the horrible sickness that comes along with evil thoughts. He has no real choice, "he ceases to be a wrongdoer. He ceases also to be a creature of moral choice." Being stripped of his free will, Alex is no longer a human he is the government's toy. "Choosing to be deprived of the ability to make an ethical choice [does not mean] you have in a sense really chosen the good." Alex Get more content

Essay about clockwork orange
"A man who cannot choose ceases to be a man."–Anthony Burgess

Clockwork Orange Reflection

In the movie A Clockwork Orange one of the gang members "Dim" was as violent and cruel as the leader of the gang "Alex." At the end of the story the gang had broken up and "Dim" had turned into a cop. This goes to show that when Dim was in the gang he did horrible things, but once he left he turned into a cop that helps protect the community from activities such as gang violence. He turns into a cop and maybe something he was meant to be if the story line didn't happen? In the story Sher makes it understandable that as a group they decided not to help the man and he was saying that everyone else individually was for sure thinking on ways to help him. As a group they decided together not to help. This goes to show how a group has an influence on what you do. The movie and the story go hand in hand with individual versus group. Dim, in the movie was not a completely changed person but was a better person when out of the group. The narrator in the story, you can see when at home and his mother was sad about something all he could think about was the man in the well. He was able to help and talk to the man in the well when in need but, knowing his mother was also in need of her late night cries he would not help or do anything. Before any decision is made they are scared by the man in the well and go to get help. "At first afraid to disobey the voice from the man in the well, we turned around and actually began to walk toward the nearest house, which was Arthur's. But along the way we slowed down, and then we stopped, and after waiting what seemed like a good while, we quietly came back to the well" They were scared to not listen to the man in the well and obey his orders. So they were going to get help and go to Arthur's house. Something made them stop and turn around and go back to the well. Not getting help for the man in the well. When my younger brother is his group of friends they tend to as a group decide to do something but there is never one person to ever make the right decision or be the one to say "no this isn't right we should do this instead." They all as a group turned around. Not one person kept walking to Arthur's house to get any help. But instead in fact did disobey the voice from the man in

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A Clockwork Orange is a Stanley Kubrick film from 1971. Kubrick directed the film and wrote the screen play based on the 1962 novel from author Anthony Burgess. A Clockwork Orange was originally rated, "X" and nominated for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Film Editing and Best Screenplay, but lost in each category to William Friedkin's The French Connection (filmsite.org). The set design is by John Barry, costume design by Milena Canonero, music by Wendy Carlosand cinematography by John Alcott.A Clockwork Orangewas awarded the New York Film Critics Awards for Best Film and Best Direction (FilmReference.com).

Distributed by Warner Brothers, the estimated budget was $2,200,000 with a Gross of $26,589,355 in the USA alone...show more content...

The theory being that distance does not shut off our moral issues and/or questions about the film, but keeps us engrossed in the film while thinking about our own sense of morality. Kipp continues, adding that "Kubrick's lenses are wide and slightly distorted; many of the costumes and sets are painted in vivid, eye–catching primal colors; and half the dialogue is done in a slang mixture of Slavic, Cockney, and Russian" (Kipp). Critic Roger Ebert states that Kubrick uses the wide angle lenses on objects that are fairly close to the camera, so that the lens distorts the sides of the image. "The objects in the center of the screen look normal, but those on the edges tend to slant upward and outward, becoming bizarrely elongated. Kubrick uses the wide–angle lens almost all the time when he is showing events from Alex's point of view; this encourages us to see the world as Alex does, as a crazy–house of weird people out to get him.

When Kubrick shows us Alex, however, he either places him in the center of a wide–angle shot (so Alex alone has normal human dimensions,) or uses a standard lens that does not distort. So, a visual impression is built up during the movie that Alex, and only Alex, is normal (Rogerebert.com).

The story itself takes place in the future and is narrated by Get

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A Clockwork Orange

We are first introduced to Alex (Malcolm McDowell) in the company of his posse, strangely sipping drugged milk in a freakish bar with anatomically indiscrete manikins serving as tittie–taps and tables. The ensuing scenes flash from Alex and his three droogs brutally beating an old man to a violent rape scene to a semi–chaotic gang–brawl. The story is of Alex and his love of the old ultra–violence, his act of murder, his betrayal and imprisonment, and his cure (twice).

Adapted from Anthony Burgess' 1962 novel, A Clockwork Orange is in part a response to psychological behaviorism and the age of classical conditioning. While in prison, Alex is selected for a special treatment that will cure him of his impulses to...show more content... The juxtaposition of classical cultural icons including Beethoven's symphonies and Pomp and Circumstance with sexual violence and crime creates a grating tension between conventionality, conformity, and chaos. Another advantage of the visual/audio media to Burgess' work is the fluidity afforded his unique Russo–anglican dialect.

For all its artistry, however, the sad truth is that Kubrick's adaptation of A Clockwork Orange to thebig screen is painful to watch from beginning to end. Ultimately, I believe it fails as a film. The unfortunate consequence of Kubrick's constant barrage of horrific scenes is that the most thoughtful, psychological, philosophical components of Burgess' novel (that made it important enough a work to put on the big screen in the first place) are muddied and masked behind the very distracting shock value of the violence, which is, quite simply, too "in your face". Let's face it, the pornography is distracting. The important thematic questions having to do with free will and ethics in the age of psychological behaviorism, are present but unclear. Following his release from treatment, Alex, deprived of his ability to fight, is repeatedly victimized and beaten, and eventually driven to an attempted suicide by Beethoven's 9th. If the film's intent is to provoke its audiences Get

A Clockwork Orange Essay
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Analysis and Interpretation of A Clockwork Orange

A Clockwork Orange, by Anthony Burgess, is one of the most experimental, original, and controversial novels of the twentieth century. It is both a compelling work of literature and an in–depth study in linguistics. The novel is a satirical, frightening science fiction piece, not unlike others of this century such as George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty–Four or Aldous Huxley's Brave New World. However, the conflicts and resolutions in A Clockwork Orange are more philosophical than social, and its message is far more urgent.

A Clockwork Orange is made up of three parts containing 21 chapters, 21 being the official age of human maturity. It is a stream–of–consciousness novel...show more content...

In Nadsat, "orange" means "man" (which is derived from the Malay word "orang," meaning "man"), so a clockwork orange would be a man moving without pause or thought, as a clockwork (Lund). Burgess says of the title, "I mean it to stand for the application of a mechanistic morality to a living organism oozing with juice and sweetness" ("Resucked" x). After the state reforms him, the novel's hero and narrator Alex becomes a clockwork orange, a man working as a machine.

Nadsat is the primary language, although not the exclusive one, of A Clockwork Orange. Burgess claims he uses it "to muffle the raw response we expect from pornography." But he also uses it to create a "literary adventure" ("Resucked" x). The use of Nadsat emphasizes many of the struggles involved with A Clockwork Orange's purpose. The struggle between the old and the young the conservative and the progressive is made more sensational by the separation of language. Alex is misunderstood by his parents, the police, and the government philosophically, but also literally, widening the gap between him and the "sane" world.

Burgess also manipulates language in A Clockwork Orange in more traditional ways, in the form of literary and linguistic devices. The novel is saturated with irony and dark humor, dotted with repetition, and laced with word play.

Irony is used extensively A Clockwork Orange. One of the most repeated and significant examples of irony is in Alex's description

Essay about Analysis of A Clockwork Orange
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Eat this sweetish segment or spit it out. You are free.&amp

Anthony Burgess has been heralded as one of the greatest literary geniuses of the twentieth century. Although Burgess has over thirty works of published literature, his most famous is A ClockworkOrange. Burgess's novel is a futuristic look at a Totalitarian government. Themain character, Alex, is an "ultra–violent" thief who has no problem using force against innocent citizens to get what he wants. The beginning of the story takes us through a night in the life of Alex and his Droogs, and details their adventures that occupy their time throughout the night. At fifteen years old, Alex is set up by his Droogs–Pete,...show more content... He taught himself how to read music and how to play the piano. The inspiration for A Clockwork Orange came while during World War II, when his wife was assaulted while he fought. She died about a month after the incident from internal bleeding, along with their unborn child, who was killed during the assault. He compensated by releasing his anger into A Clockwork Orange, in which a scene takes place that mirrors the traumatic incident. Anthony Burgess died at seventy–six, November 25, 1993 of cancer (Cohen).

The novel's main theme deals with free choice and spiritual freedom. Anthony Burgess expresses his view that no matter how "good" one's actions are, unless one has free moral choice, he is spiritually damned (Malafry). The novel revolves around one criminally minded teen, Alex, whose world consists of rape, murder, and ruthless violence. Alex is eventually set up by his "droogs" (friends) and is arrested and jailed. After some time in jail, Alex is placed in a new rehabilitating program that uses electro–shock therapy, new medicines, and exposure to violent film. The program breaks all that Alex holds dear and builds him up with a new artificial conscience. This part of the novel presents the reader with a new, reformed Alex, an Alex without free will orfreedom of choice; and Alex that has become a victim. Burgess considers this lack of freedom to be spiritually murderous and terribly

Clockwork Orange Essay
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A Clockwork Orange
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Anthony Burgess' A Clockwork Orange focuses on the violent and destructive tendencies of the narrator, a fifteen year old boy named Alex. By enlisting Alex as the narrator of his own story, Burgess gives the reader a firsthand account of everything leading up to Alex being captured and imprisoned, first in a jail and then in an institution for the mentally unsound. By including his accounts of what life was like before and after his incarceration, Alex's character makes social commentary on several issues that were relevant at the time of the novel's publication, 1963, and remain relevant even in the present, such as rehabilitation in prisons and the treatment of patients in psychiatric institutions. When Alex details his assault on an older, professor–type man, "The old veck began to make sort of chumbling shooms– 'wuf waf wof'– so Georgie let go of holding his goobers apart and just let him have...show more content...

While some can argue that Alex shows no remorse for what he's done and should be punished, others argue that he is a young man who has a definite mental disorder and becomes a victim of a system that focuses more on its own image than the welfare of its charges. When Alex speaks of his realization that Beethoven is being played over the films he is forced to watch, "Then I noticed, in all my pain and sickness, what music it was that like crackled and boomed on the sound–track, and it was Ludwig van, the last movement of the Fifth Symphony...," it is clear that he is in pain and distress, as the doctors pervert the one thing that brings him actual joy (Burgess 113). The readers are given a glimpse of a vulnerable Alex, and it is up to the reader's discretion to decide whether or not they feel that he or any other criminal, regardless of crimes committed, deserves to be in that

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A Clockwork Orange Social Commentary Essay

Anthony Burgess ' A Clockwork Orange is a dystopian novel set in an oppressive, futuristic state. Published in 1962, A Clockwork Orange is an extremely intense, graphic, and, at times, horrifying novel. A reader begins to question their own values as they become numb and desensitized to the violence at hand. Both behaviorism and free will is occurring throughout A Clockwork Orange. A Clockwork Orange brings up a question, how much control of our own free will do we actually have? Do we really control our own lives, or are they subject to the cards we are dealt? In A Clockwork Orange, behavior analysis and free will are displayed. Human nature has long since been in question. Alex is an extremely interesting character. He is a...show more content...

Alex had control over the things that he was doing, and then it was taken away from him. We have very limited control over what we do because society takes our free will away. Behaviorism has a relation to free will. Watson's view on behaviorism is "...psychology should embrace behavior as its subject matter and rely on experimental observation of that subject matter as its method" (Moore 451). Also Watson published his paper Psychology as the Behaviorist Views It, and in this paper he states: "Psychology as the behaviorist views it is a purely objective experimental branch of natural science. Its theoretical goal is the prediction and control of behavior. Introspection forms no essential part of its methods, nor is the scientific value of its data dependent upon the readiness with which they lend themselves to interpretation in terms of consciousness" (Harzem 6) Watson set the stage for behaviorism, which soon rose to dominate psychology. Watson went a little overboard in that paper. But on the good side, he attracted many enthusiastic followers, became the national interest, made headlines in national newspapers, and was the subject of many articles in popular periodicals. But then there were troubles that Watson's experiment wasn't considered "Science" (Behaviorism For the New Psychology) Get more content

A Clockwork Orange

Authors who write of other times and places help us to better understand our own lives. Discuss A Clockwork Orange in terms of that statement.

A "clockwork orange" can be described as something that has a convincing outer appearance yet in the inside is merely controlled by outer influences, such as a clock set in motion by its owner. In AClockwork Orange, Anthony Burgess takes us into the future where violent criminals are forced to be "good," and introduces us to Alex, a young teen who engages in a life of rape, ultra–violence, and Beethoven with his "droogs," or friends, and talks in the slang language of "nadsat." He goes through various phases in his life, evolving into a more...show more content... All humans are born with the desire to do evil, and thus we can justify Alex's violent actions. Eventually, Alex's friends betray him and set him up to be imprisoned, where he is conditioned to hate evil and to become sick at the mention or thought of evil, as well as the music he so used to enjoy. Alex walks out as a new person: one who is totally "good," yet has no choice to be bad. He is a walking robot conditioned by the government – a clockwork orange. After much turmoil and anxiety, Alex is "fixed," and once more has free will. In the final chapter, we see how Alex finally matures and frees himself from outside control. He decides to find a wife to take care of his son. In doing so, he realizes how his youth was that of a clockwork orange and we see how this realization breaks him from the control it had over him. This can be seen in our lives in that we eventually become morally responsible and take steps toward fulfilling our obligations in life. Burgess points out an interesting question in this novel. Would it be better to be forced to do good or to choose evil with freedom of choice? Would it be right to live our lives "perfectly," on the condition that we had no control over it? Burgess states his answer in the words spoken by the prison chaplain, who says, "When a man ceases to choose, he ceases to be a Get more content

A Clockwork Orange Essay
A Clockwork Orange

A Clockwork Orange

To leave out the final chapter of A Clockwork Orange is to change the entire meaning of the novel; as Burgess says in the introduction, his story is transformed into a fable. Without the last chapter the reader is left with a dark and pessimistic theme, that absolute good and evil exist in this world and it is possible for a man to be pure evil. Alex is conditioned and unconditioned, and in the end all indications point to a malicious life of crime. He is a clockwork orange, programmed to be subservient to a master, whether it be the Devil, the government, or a group of men. Alex is a windup toy. However, this was not the messageBurgess intended to convey. He believes that a clockwork...show more content...

Chapter 21 gives the book an absolutely different theme. Alex becomes board with his malicious life, he begins to evolve. "I was like growing up" he says about himself in chapter 21. He decides he wants to create rather than to destruct. The theme of the book with chapter 21 included is that people are who they want to be. There is no such thing as pure good or pure evil. A person can not be controlled or programmed to behave a certain way. Humans have the free will to do whatever they choose.

I prefer the version of A Clockwork Orange that contains the book in its entirety, all twenty one chapters of it. Without the twenty first chapter the book is incomplete. It is a fable rather than a novel. This is due to the fact that the main character does not evolve. In order for a book to be considered a novel, the main character must experience some type of growth or evolution. After chapter 20, it appears Alex is planning on doing the same things he did in the first section of the novel. In chapter 21, the reader has an opportunity to see Alex evolve into the person he becomes at the end of the complete novel. Chapter 21 also contains numerical significance. Burgess states in the introduction that he is a believer in numerical theology. There are three sections with seven chapters each. Seven multiplied by three equals twenty one. Burgess felt that this was

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A Clockwork Orange Essay: Chapters 1-21

Within futuristic London, many sexual and heinous crimes are committed by a group of young men and the retaliation of their victims seeking vengeance, often acting as vigilantes. The domino effect of the crimes ends up with offenders turning into victims and vice versa. A group of young men, self proclaimed as a gang of "droogs" dress up during the night in white outfits, hats and masks and go around the city committing street crimes, assaulting random innocent people, raping some and ultimately killing two. Within the gang of "droogs" there is a ringleader named Alex who dominates and intimidates the rest of the group, Dim, Georgie, and Pete. They all...show more content...

Weathers and eventually hits her with a blunt object in the room, a large expensive penis statue, killing her. Hearing the police sirens, he attempts to flea and is stopped by his own gang at the front of the door where they smash Alex's head with a glass of milk plus. This is an act of retaliation from when Alex had earlier intimidated and assaulted his fellow gang members. Although they are all offenders, they victimize Alex by setting him up for a crime that involved shared responsibility. While Alex is in interrogation, he is not given his due process to a fair and speedy trial. The cops assault him, allow Mr. Deltoid to spit in his face, and beat him. They cops do not remain objective which shows that the system is failing to properly conduct itself. After Alex is incarcerated, he shows no remorse for his acts. Instead, he manipulates the people around him while fantasizing about the violence within the bible. He hears about an aversion program funded by the government and acts accordingly to be picked for this type of plea bargain. Instead of spending the fourteen years in jail he is repeatedly shown acts of violence accompanied by his favorite piece of music, Beethoven's Ninth. Instead of addressing his issues and mental state, the government attempts to alter his biological disposition to want to commit crime. Rather than enforcing that crime is wrong, they drug him to feel as if he would vomit when he is

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A Clockwork Orange. Essay

I think that A Clockwork Orange is a book worth reading because it is relatable, makes you think, and is interesting. The author, Anthony Burgess, was born February 25, 1917. At the young age of two his mother passed away. He was brought up by his aunt and later his stepmother. Even with such an unstable childhood Burgess continued on to enroll in college and major in English. He had a passion for music, which he expressed in the main character of A Clockwork Orange. Burgess wrote several accomplished symphonies in his day, as well as over fifty books. He was diagnoses with a brain tumor at about age 40 but well outlived his doctor's expectations continuing his artistic output until his death from lung cancer at age 76....show more content...

He fails to complete the job, wakes up in a hospital, and finds the mental barriers gone and a pity dream job is handed to him to compensate for the emotional damage.

A Clockwork Orange had a loose theme of the necessity of not only good, but also evil in human nature. Alex may have been selfish and deviant but his character and the characters like him did seem to have a strong grasp on the concept that life was for living. Without the ability of choice to commit evil acts which was an impulse inside of him, his ability to act human was affected. The freedom of making these choices seems to be what makes us human. Hence without this freedom he is driven to attempt suicide.

The major theme of the novel was a battle of the greater importance of a safe stable society or greater importance of free–will. The main character had been conditioned to feel ill at the thought of bad acts, he had not however been conditioned to not wish to commit these acts. After viewing the presentation of the "successful" conversion from evil to "good," where rather than fight Alex licked the man's shoe, the prison Chaplin stated, "Self interest, the fear of physical pain drove him to do that grotesque act of self–abasement. Its insincerity was clearly to be seen. He ceases to be a wrongdoer. He ceases also to be a creature capable of moral choice." So, is it better to be morally right without free–will or Get

Essay on A Clockwork Orange
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Anthony Burgess' novel, A Clockwork Orange has been called shocking, controversial, and horrifying. A Clockwork Orange is controversial, but to focus merely on the physical aspects of the work is time wasted. Burgess is concerned with the issue of ethics. He believes that goodness comes directly from choice; it is better to choose the bad than to be forced into doing the good. For taking away a person's free will is simply turning them into a piece of "clockwork"; a piece of machine containing all the sweet juices of life, but incapable of being human. Government, as it is simply named in the book, is portrayed as being the great oppressor. The novel is based in a future where...show more content...

It is made quite clear throughout the novel that the police even consider such brutality to be fun. When Alex is taken into custody, he refuses to speak until he has a lawyer. He knows the law, he says. The headpoliceman replies, "...we know the law too, but that...isn't everything." He then proceeds to punch Alex in the stomach as the other policemen "laugh their gullivers off." One cannot help but to compare the brutality of Alex to that of the policemen. Alex is an adolescent, yet the people put in place to control him exhibit the same behavior. Burgess uses the statement from the officer to help explain the meaning of his novel. If the law is not everything, then breaking the law is not everything. Rape and abuse are illegal, but being socially "wrong" is not the most important thing to consider. The author wants the reader to ask, cangoodness be achieved out of bad behavior?

Ludovico's technique is the main vehicle for Burgess' purpose. The technique attempts to turn Alex onto the right path by taking away his ability to do wrong. In blunt terms, it obliterates his free will. Alex is forced into exhibiting acceptable behavior, from fear of becoming physically ill at the thought of wrongdoing. So now, in the eyes of society, he is an acceptable human being; human, being the operative word. Is not the essence of humanity the Get more content

A Clockwork Orange Essay

In today's society, there is an evil that hides in the minds of rulers, governments–even everyday people. This evil lies in the crimes committed by thousands of people each year, the corruption of governments, and the suffering of innocent people. The laws and regulations that we live by today are put in place in order to prevent crime from encompassing everything people hold dear–to stop the bad people. In the story of A Clockwork Orange the narrator, Alex, gives us a criminal's view of the world. Throughout the course of three years, Alex takes part in numerous robberies, murders and rapes people of all ages. In his mind, the disturbing acts he commits fill him with satisfaction and pleasure. When reading this novel through his eyes, the...show more content...

By Rebecca Solnit, I have come to realize that my modern day life is not far from that of Alex's. Throughout the process of reading this book I was shocked many times by the everyday acts of evil against innocent people. It is sad to know that they are so common in our world today. Acts such as robbery, rape and murder happen every day, and they don't always just take one thing from the victims. As Alex often shows us, during the process of evil acts the victims are dehumanized and beaten. The laws and regulations put in place today are supposed to protect people from ever experiencing these horrid acts, yet even in Alex's story, little justice is done for those who suffer. Society brings out the best and worst in people and often puts people in desperate situations, allowing the darkness to come forth. People have become selfish, cold and heart–less without a care for the people around them. Our society and government today have created monsters and have done so without giving any type of cure or proper treatment to bring them back into the light. The darkness and evil that had consumed Alex is the same as the darkness that is in our very world today. The world of darkness is breaking through the fake seams of society that present a false picture of happiness, and if our government and people all over the world do not make a change, it will consume us

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A Clockwork Orange Dystopia

As well as, the reality that it may be the cause for children's speech problems and inability to properly read although many people believe educational programs, such as Sesame Street, are encouraging their children to count and learn words ("Impact of..."). The reason being that, television does not give feedback to children, and instead are programmed to say, "That's correct", or "Good job", when in reality, the child is just sitting their smiling at puppets. To add, it harms a child's development issues because it gives off artificial encouragement to the senses. A child's vision can be harmed because of the quick movement of the images, and hearing can be impaired because of poor sound features. The overall aspect of it is, children learn better from interactive learning and experiencing emotions, talking to loved ones, and making friends to play with. With a television they get none of that, instead they develop short attention spans because of the various thins they "learn" in one sitting ("Television..."). It shows roughly 12,000 acts of violence, murder and rape being the most portrayed, and over 1,000 studies guarantee that too much screen time for boys increases their aggressive behavior. Such as the numerous crimes inspired by Stanley Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange. If the various murders of teenage boys and the assault of a woman by a man dressed as a droog were not disturbing enough, Kubrick indefinitely took it off the market after a gang rape was conducted

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Argumentative Essay On A Clockwork Orange

Morality in A Clockwork Orange

A Clockwork Orange, directed by American film director and producer Stanley Kubrick, is a film adaptation of the book written by Anthony Burgess. This is a fictional dystopian film showing people of today's society how the government can control people's actions, emotions, and ideas by completely abolishing the sense of free–will. The film deals with many moral issues that are developed through the actions of the main character, Alexander Delarge, and the trials and tribulations that the government put him through in order to "civilize" him.A Clockwork Orange expresses ideas that those who disagree with or rebel against societal norms should be controlled and have their actions and ideas suppressed and undermined therefore destroying the concept of an individual's sense of free–will. The film deals with the idea of freedom of choice, bringing to light the concept that we will be losing our humanity if we aren't given the choice between good and evil. Through A Clockwork Orange, Stanley Kubrick asks the viewer, "Without free–will are we really human anymore?" The film is set in an undisclosed time and place, but the viewer can infer that it's set sometime in a dystopian future. It can be presumed that the movie is set in the future due to the decor of the interior of the houses, the fashion style of the characters in the film, and the year of the car Alex and his gang drive. All of the homes depicted in this film are furnished having a bright, colorful, modern look to them, yet they seem sterile and uncomfortable. The characters in the film also seem to match this fashion style with many of the women having unnatural colored hair and wearing bright, odd–looking clothes. The model of Alex's car also works to confirm the time period as being sometime in the future. When Alex and his droogs are causing mayhem, driving on the wrong side of the road towards Mr. Alexander's house, Alex narrates and states "The Durango–95 purred away real horrorshow Гі a nice, warm vibraty feeling all through your guttiwuts." (A Clockwork Orange, Alex). The film was released to the public in 1971, so the fact that the model of the car is a Durango–95 means that it must be set in the future. The

Theme Of Morality In 'A Clockwork Orange'
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A Clockwork Orange, By Anthony

The plot in Anthony Burgess's A Clockwork Orange is structured in a unique style. Burgess divides the novel into three parts. In part one, Alex is involved in brutal crimes. In part two, Alex is imprisoned for the crimes he committed and is forced to endure behavioral treatment. In part three, Alex is interested in living a peaceful life that does not involve crime (Goh 1). Burgess's organization and creativity influences the aspects of the plot. At the beginning of the novel, Alex, a fifteen year–old leader of a violent teenage gang known as the "droogs," attacks an old professor and brutally rapes his wife. The next night, Alex and the "droogs" break into an elderly woman's mansion to loot it. However, the police arrive in time to arrest

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Theme Of A Clockwork Orange

t was a hot summer day in the year 2011. Everyone is walkin' around with popsicles, ice cream, and cold refreshments. Then, there is me, with a warm bottle of water and a bag of hot Cheetos I dreadfully regretted buying. I thought, this must be how my story ends, but just as I had given up hope, my younger brother walks by with a cold Sprite! The moment he leaves it, I dash over faster than you could say the word pop, and snatched up the can. Just as I took my first couple sips, i seemed to have been caught in a daze. Because after what seemed like the shortest 20 seconds ever before, i drop the can. Yes. Drop. The Sprite splashes all over the sidewalk and makes a big crash. My little brother yells at me for spilling his soda, but i ignore him, staring in astonishment at what was supposed to be my big break. You know what they say, " What goes around comes around" or maybe you know it as "You get what you deserve" and for you really frisky people, you can probably identify it as "Karma's a *****". Either way, i think the main theme that plays out in the storyA Clockwork Orange, by Anthony Burgess is that karma always gets you. A Clockwork Orangeis about a man named Alex Delarge, who is a teen (around sixteen or seventeen) that is the head of a four man gang in a future England setting. Due to his lack of leadership skills, his buddies turn on him and abandon him as he is apprehended by authorities. While in prison, he is put into a prototype hypnosis program called the

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Examination of the Use of Language in "A Clockwork Orange"

The created patch–work language of Nadsat in the novel, A Clockwork Orange, satirizes the social classes and gang life of Anthony Burgess's futuristic society. The most prominent of these tools being his use of a completely new language and the depiction of family life from the eyes of a fifteen year old English hoodlum. Burgess effectively broke arcane traditions when he wrote A Clockwork Orangeby blending two forms of effective speech into the vocabulary of the narrator and protagonist, Alex. Burgess, through his character Alex, uses the common or "proper" method of vernacular in certain situations, while uses his own inventive slang–language...show more content...

The reader would be brainwashed into learning minimal Russian. The novel was to be an exercise in linguistic programming, with the exoticisms gradually clarified by context: I would resist to the limit any publisher's demand that a glossary be provided. " (You've Had Your Time 38)

Burgess believed that adding a glossary to help define the slang used in A Clockwork Orangewould have somehow cheapened it, and it most certainly would have. He evens admits to brainwashing his readers just for the sake of what he called an "exercise in linguistic programming." Without even realizing it, the readers of A Clockwork Orange were Burgess' guinea pigs. It was, however, a successful experiment. Burgess achieved the sense that he was trying to convey, and readers understood the language without too much difficulty. That is, of course, until the book was published in America. Roger Craik comments on this linguistic phenomina in his critical essay on A Clockwork Orange. "Nevertheless, when the first American edition of A Clockwork Orange was published in 1963, it had not only a glossary but an afterword by Stanley Edgar Hyman. The glossary confirms the preponderance of Slavic–based or more particularly Russian–based coinages, and the afterword still stands as the most comprehensive discussion of nadsat. Even though Hyman surprisingly confesses himself unable to read Burgess's book without Get more content

Use of Language in A Clockwork Orange Essay

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