Comparing Person In The Outsiders And The Wave

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The Outsiders and The Wave are two very similar and different novels. The Outsiders is about a group of people that have to live through the struggle of poverty and society and only having each other and have to go through many obstacles. The Wave is about a experiment from a classroom that takes over a whole school and makes people feel equal, without realizing how it’s taking over their brains and life and giving away their rights as a human. This paper will compare and contrast the conflicts of person versus society and person versus person in The Outsiders and The Wave. The first conflict analyzed is the problem between person and society. Person versus society is a person against a group of people or a whole society. In The Outsiders, …show more content…

In The Outsiders, the Greasers are being judged for how rich they are and what their social status was. It implies that the Greasers were kicked around, nobody wanted to be friends with them because it would ruin their reputation, and they seemed like bad people. While the Socs were what everybody wanted to be rich and perfect, but they were not really perfect. Ponyboy had to live with these rules that were created over time by people, while people treated him and the others like trash. While in The Wave, students got judged if they didn’t join The Wave. Also, if they didn’t join members threatened them that they would be left with no friends and would get beaten up. Laurie had been approached by members of The Wave after she wrote the paper about it and didn’t show up to the rally. She stood her ground and didn’t let anyone stop her from voicing her opinion about what The Wave was doing to people On the contrary, these novels are similar in a few ways. They both imply that society had tried to stop them from voicing their opinions, and how people had judged them just because of either their socioeconomic status or if they joined The Wave. It also shows that both characters wanted a change from how people were living in their communities and how they treated