Monday, October 17, 2011

Harrison Bergeron Thesis

Single Paragraph Essay

“Harrison Bergeron”

“Harrison Bergeron,” written by Kurt Vonnegut Jr. focuses on equality—physically and mentally—strongly controlled by the government in the year 2081; the beautiful are forced to look ugly, the physically skilled are required to wear weights. With these handicaps making everyone so equal, the world became very different, odd, and average. But the government has no right or reason to push the whole world to be “…equal every which way.” (203) To suppress someone’s natural looks or physical talents is not only wrong to natural human rights, but it is also illegal, and for very good reason: everyone is different. If someone is a musical genius, he or she should have every right to compose whatever he or she wants. If someone is an excellent street dancer overflowing with passion for such a hobby, the sky should be the only limit. Equality means that everyone has equal rights, not that no one is better than anyone else at one trade or another. Furthermore, competition is a natural necessity that keeps people—and, moreover, the world—moving forward. In fact, Vonnegut points out: “Some things about living still weren’t quite right…April, for instance, still drove people crazy by not being springtime.” (203) No matter how equal the government tries to make the world, people will always be flawed in some way, shape, or form, good and bad, and every individual needs these flaws not only survive, but thrive creatively and freely as his or her own person.

Word Count: 245

Works Cited
Jr., Kurt Vonnegut. "Harrison Bergeron." Power of Language - Language of power. Pearson Custom Publishing, 2009. 203-209.

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