Ellie Nestor Ms. Nash 8th grade LA – period 4 30 March 2017 Knowledge; Key to freedom? The word dystopia is also well known as the antonym of utopia. In literature, the word dystopia is used to talk about an imagined nightmare world. Without knowledge, the giving or taking of it, people can end up living in “an imagined nightmare world”. Dystopian texts can warn the reader about flaws in their society and helps give a broader idea on how to fix them. Both The Giver and Fahrenheit 451 are to help people recognize the flaws in our society at those periods in time and the books both give different perspectives on how to fix the flaws. Lois Lowry communicates to the reader censorship of knowledge and the discovering of knowledge, while Ray Bradbury conveys the same message about censorship of knowledge, he tells a different message about the giving if knowledge. …show more content…
When Jonas starts opening up to the Giver, he recognizes yet another thing that his society has kept from him by saying, “’I don’t understand it yet, I don’t know what it is. But sometimes I see something. And maybe it's beyond ' " (Lowry 64). The giving of knowledge however is conveyed in a more forward attempt to show how their society passes on knowledge, "Jonas felt nothing unusual at first… only the light touch of the old man's hand on his back…'Whew,' he said. 'It was exhausting. But you know, even transmitting that tiny memory to you- I think it lightened me just a little' "(Lowry