The Veldt has a psychoanalytic structure that shows how wealth affects body and mind. In this story, a rich family purchases a smart house to support their family in place of the parents, only to find out that it is heavily affecting the kids in a negative manner. It just goes to show that “too much of something isn’t a good thing.” This essay will show how the relationship between money and family relationships can have on one’s wholeness.
Although the story “The Veldt” can be read through multiple critical lenses, it has a more complex structure leading towards a psychoanalytic context. We first get a look at this when foreshadowing of death was symbolized by the vultures in the scene. In many stories, vultures represent death or the passing. Many symbols are present along with the vultures, including the lions that are often seen
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He and Lydia make an attempt to become better parents because of the nervousness and tension in the house, and struggle to maintain their personal beliefs. Lydia confesses to George that she would feel much safer and more as a parent figure if they took control and turned the house "off" and go back to doing the natural tasks that makes them normal. She is most concerned to being able to provide for her children as a normal mother would be doing and feels that the house is taking over her life and family. She needs to have a feeling that she is making a difference and contributing to the wanted success of her family coming together as one whole. The need to provide a sense of security does not stop with the start of technology becoming bigger and more useful than ever, according to Bradbury. As George is said to have been “amused” at one point, Lydia both looked and sounded “tense.” George’s subconscious makes up plenty of excuses that aren’t even logical, showing that he must have known that something would happen to him and his family sooner