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The Giver

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No one ever feels pain, sadness, or hunger. There is no competition between the children in school, and the Committee of Elders assigns a career to each child. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Giver


1
The Giver
  • Lois Lowery

2
Background
  • Published in 1993, The Giver reflects some of
    the social criticism
  • of the times. Abortion, family ethics,
    euthanasia, and assisted
  • suicide are all issues that were hotly debated in
    the 1990s.
  • Lowry deals with these issues by creating a
    seemingly perfect
  • society that never experiences any of the
    unpleasant realities of
  • life.
  • Like its predecessors Brave New World and 1984,
    The Giver is
  • Lowrys attempt to criticize reality by creating
    a utopian
  • society.
  • As we read, we discover that the act of
    controlling a society is
  • often worse than the disappointments it is meant
    to eliminate.
  • We quickly realize that this utopian society is
    really dystopian.
  • However, Lowrys society, unlike the others,
    offers some hope
  • in the end.

3
Setting
  • Lois Lowrys The Giver is set in an imaginary
    world
  • during an unspecified time.
  • The community in the novel is isolated and
  • seemingly utopian in nature, with no pain,
    illness,
  • or color.
  • Each individual has a designated place in
    society.
  • Many of the unique traits and rituals that set
    people
  • apart in other societies have been eliminated.
  • The author is deliberately vague in further
    defining
  • the setting, for to narrow it down any more
  • specifically would detract from the ominous
  • atmosphere of this society of Sameness.

4
Characters
  • Jonas He is the main character. The Committee
    of
  • Elders chooses Jonas to become the next Receiver
    of
  • Memory. Jonas assignment distances him from his
  • family and friends and forever changes the way he
  • looks at life in the community.
  • Lily She is Jonas sister. Shes a talkative
    and simple
  • child.
  • Jonas mother She works at the Department of
    Justice.
  • Her job involves handing out punishment to
  • community members who break one of the many
    rules.
  • Jonas father Because of his nurturing
    qualities, he is
  • chosen to work as a Nurturer.

5
Characters
  • Asher He is Jonas best friend. Hes a boy who
  • frequently uses imprecise language, a punishable
    offense
  • in the community. He enjoys making up making up
  • games and is assigned the job of Assistant
    Director of
  • Recreation.
  • Fiona Fiona is gentle and caring with the Old
    she is
  • assigned the job of Caretaker of the Old.
  • Larissa Larissa lives in the House of the Old.
    She tells
  • Jonas of two releases.
  • Chief Elder She is the leader of the community.
  • Rosemary Rosemary was selected as the new
    Receiver
  • of Memory before Jonas. She lasted only five
    weeks
  • before she requested release.

6
Characters
  • Committee of Elders They make sure that all
    rules are
  • followed and occasionally asks The Giver for his
  • opinion about the rules. They are responsible for
  • assigning all jobs at the Ceremony of Twelve. The
  • Committee of Elders is responsible for bringing
  • sameness to the community.
  • Gabriel He is the newchild that Jonas father
    brings
  • home to live with the family. He has light eyes
    like
  • Jonas.
  • The Giver The Giver has pale eyes like Jonas.
    He is an
  • old man who appears to be much older than his
    actual
  • age. His job as Receiver of Memory, although a
    position
  • of honor, has caused him to live with great pain
    and
  • loneliness.

7
Synopsis
  • Eleven-year-old Jonas seems to live in a perfect
    community.
  • Everything is very well planned, and the
    community takes care of all
  • needs. No one ever feels pain, sadness, or
    hunger. There is no
  • competition between the children in school, and
    the Committee of
  • Elders assigns a career to each child. The
    Committee has many rules
  • designed to keep the community running smoothly.
    After careful
  • study, the Committee selects which men will marry
    which women.
  • Every couple is presented with one male and one
    female child. Only
  • fifty children are born each year. It seems to be
    a perfect place to live.
  • At the annual December ceremony where each age
    group
  • receives its new privileges and responsibilities,
    Jonas and his agemates
  • receive their adult assignments. Jonas feels
    apprehensive before the
  • Ceremony because he has no idea what his
    assignment will be. When
  • the Committee chooses him to serve as Receiver of
    Memory, his life
  • changes dramatically. People begin to act
    differently toward him. As
  • Jonas enters training with The Giver, he begins
    to see the real
  • consequences of the perfect life of the community.

8
Welcome to Utopia
  • Utopia is a place of
  • ideal perfection,
  • especially in laws,
  • government, and
  • social conditions.
  • Dystopia is an
  • imaginary place
  • where people lead
  • dehumanized and
  • often fearful
  • lives.

9
Who invented rules?
  • No one knows for sure when the first rule was
  • invented.
  • There have been formal rules for people to
    follow since
  • ancient times.
  • Golden Rule- Do unto others as you would have
    them
  • do unto you.
  • Bushido- unwritten code that guided the samurai
  • Gravitas- a traditional rule of dignity that
    Roman
  • citizens were expected to live by

10
Watching your words
  • Early in the novel, we learn that the citizens of
  • Jonas world are taught to use precise language.
  • Not only are rules and apologies recited in
  • unison at school, but students carefully choose
  • the right adjectives to describe certain
    situations
  • or what they are thinking or feeling.
  • This makes the use of connotation and
  • euphemism important tools in Jonas world, as
  • well as ours.

11
Euphemism
  • A euphemism is a word or
  • term that has mild or vague
  • connotations and that serves
  • to mask the offensiveness or
  • harshness of the actual word
  • or term. What euphemisms
  • are used in our society?
  • Example
  • A used car being called
  • certified pre-owned
  • Think of two other
  • examples of your own.

12
Connotation
  • The connotations of a word are the suggestions
    and
  • associations that go along with the word,
    stretching
  • beyond its dictionary meaning.
  • Notice the first sentence of the novel.
  • It was almost December and Jonas was beginning
    to be
  • frightened.
  • The word December is rich in connotations
    cold,
  • darkness, the death that comes to plants in
    winter.
  • The opposite of connotation is DENOTATION, or
    the
  • dictionary definition of a word.
  • Every word has both a denotation and a
    connotation.

13
About the Author
  • The Giver was inspired in part by Lowrys
  • relationship with her father who was, at that
    time,
  • in a nursing home having lost most of his
    long-term
  • memory.
  • She realized one day while visiting her father
    that,
  • without memory, there is no pain, and began to
  • imagine a society in which the past was
    deliberately
  • forgotten.
  • The flaws in that supposedly ideal society show
    the
  • need for personal and societal memory and for
  • making connections with the past and with each
  • other.
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