A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess
[2023-12-17 11:44:20]
Clockwork Orange is a book written by Anthony Burgess. It happened somewhat futuristic in Great Britain. This book is written from the point of view of anti-hero Alex. Alex is a 16 year old criminal involved in rape, violence, murder and robbery throughout the book. The book is divided into three parts, each with seven chapters (7 × 3 is 21, the official age of British adults, books will be held). The first half of this book focuses on Alex 's criminal life, the second half focuses on the recovery within Alex' s prison, and the second half focuses on Alex 's reintegration into society.
Anthony Burgess's clockwork Orange also has a unique terminology. The author wants to give something special to his character culture, that is how Nadsat was born. Just before writing this book, Burgess went to the Soviet Union, where he heard the stilyagi slang based on the mother tongue of Soviet British customers. Nadsat (whose name comes from the Russian suffix and means "- teen") becomes the mirror image of this slang, Burgess accepts these words, distorts it in its own way, and his book Put them in. Language "Cockney". So we got bitva (battle), clop (applause), devotchka (girl), koshka (cat), millicent (police), poogly (cowardly), shlapa (hat), von (stinch), zvook Skolliwoll (school), appy polly loggy (apology), beautiful polly (money), eggiweg (egg), other Slovak (word)
You can not do anything about it. Anthony Burgess created the world through his novel "Clockwind Orange". Anthony Burgess was born in 1917 and died in 1963. Many social changes occurred during this time, such as the soaring of the 1920s, the ban, the Great Depression, World War II and the fall of the Berlin Wall. Burgess not only experienced these changes, but also helped influence some of the social changes in literature and music. Anthony Burgess is Jack of all trades
When Anthony Burgess wrote "A Clockwork Orange", John Anthony Burgess Wilson made their own world in London in the future. At that time, organized crime groups and violence prevailed on the street. "This is a special view towards the future of his own terrorism" (Olson 114). Burgess created "anti-utopia novel" rather than "utopia" novel in his book. The concept of utopia society is based on the view of Sir Thomas More to his ideal society of his book Utopia. After the Second World War, the distant novel became more and more common and became a literary master of the times. This particular literary brand emphasizes an overly pessimistic view of human nature and raises violence and human behavior and dark areas of society in the "Clock Orange".