The Veldt By Ray Bradbury

870 Words4 Pages

“The Veldt” written by Ray Bradbury is about the creation of the Happylife Home. This story is written to project a better technological era through a family of four. This story begins with the parent’s concern with their children’s nursey, a high-tech imagination room that projects their children’s’ imaginations. Lydia sees death inside the nursery and feels the need to call a psychologist to look at the room. Lydia says it needed to shut down the house, this upsets the children and that night they steal back the nursery. This causes the death of the parents by the kids, with the elements in the nursery. The kids then proceed with their day as normal. Inside of the story, Ray Bradbury illustrates the downfall of technology without moderation, …show more content…

They are the protagonists; throughout the story we find out they might not be as innocent as they seem. The parents are round characters as we can see how they are reacting and their thoughts about each conflict in the story. Lydia feels she has been replaced by the house as she says, “I feel like I don’t belong here. The house is wife and mother now, and nursemaid.”(Bradbury 3) This shows her disconnect with the children. The parents take the worst approach possible and take away the nursery away at an instant of seeing something wrong. This leading to the children resenting them and killing them in the end. The antagonists are the children, as they are against the parents and feel no connection with them. The children are young and addicted to the nursery they have had since they were small. “They screamed and pranced and threw things. They yelled and sobbed and swore and jumped at the furniture.”(Bradbury 10) The only time we hear from the children are negatively from the parent’s point of …show more content…

The kid’s attachment to the nursery is the main conflict. Technology can create attachment and many dangers to users without restriction. They all share the same conflict in the story and the parents are the ones that want to get rid of the conflict and the kids do not agree. Bradbury includes the quote, “If children are neurotic at all, a room like that —” “It’s supposed to help them work off their neuroses in a healthful way.” (Bradbury 7) This specific quote shows the parents know this could have happened but did not address it until it was too