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'The Veldt' By Ray Bradbury

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Keira Calloway Dr.Pezzelle Composition I March 30, 2023 The Veldt Essay “The Veldt” (1950) by Ray Bradbury is a story about a family living in a HappyLife Home, which is a home with technology that does everything for the family. George and Lydia spoiled and never followed through with disciplining Peter and Wendy so that the children don’t see their parents as authority figures. George and Lydia are worried that the family depends on the Happylife Home too much, the children aren’t too happy about this news and are willing to do anything to keep the house on. “The Veldt” exposes monstrousness through the parents. Peter and Wendy don’t listen to their parents with no discipline, and George and Lydia letting the children act this way could …show more content…

George and Lydia tell the children they’re planning to turn the house off for a bit while. Imagining that his parents cannot provide for him, Peter starts to wonder how he will survive. “That sounds dreadful! Would I have to tie my own shoes instead of shoe tier, do it? And brush my own teeth and comb my hair and give myself a bath?” (8). If Peter and Wendy were taught how to live without the Happylife Home, they would never have behaved this way, to begin with. George and Lydia couldn't provide the family with basic needs if they turned off the Happylife …show more content…

Due to screams coming from the nursery, George and Lydia became suspicious of Peter and Wendy's African Veldt in the nursery. In response, George and Lydia turned off the nursery, causing Peter and Wendy to have a complete meltdown. “turn on the nursery, just for a few moments. You can’t be so abrupt.” (10). George and Lydia ended up giving the children the nursery back, once again not teaching their children discipline because they were afraid of being bad parents. George and Lydia just give their children everything they want, instead of being present parents. Peter and Wendy lock their parents in the nursery. Peter and Wendy possibly wouldn't have locked their parents into the nursery if they were good parents. Despite the fact that the children's actions revealed that all they wanted from George and Lydia was attention and to be listened to, those desires were not given to them by George and Lydia, but instead by the HappyLife

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