The danger of perfect equality is the core theme of this story. This is a lonely society, personal freedom and expressions are sacrificed for social harmony of consistency and perception. This is a society where no personal confrontation exists because people cease to compete with each other. As a result, it becomes stagnant, an expressionless society, universal mediocrity is first evaluated.
The last example is drawn on Kurt Vonnegut's short story "Harrison Bergeron" and is another theme of The Giver. The community of "gift" in 2081 and the society of "Harrison ยท Bergeron" always wanted perfection and made everyone equal. In a nutshell, people are thought to be smarter, agile, handsome or cute. These obstacles are a lively radio that is planted in the human ear to prevent a higher level of thinking, an ugly mask to hide the real beauty of a person, and a heavy item attached to block movement. In "donor" citizens can get work based on their abilities and special attributes. All work is equal and no wages. These policies are considered to equal everyone. But because smarter people can not succeed by mastering power, they are actually hindering, limiting their society, causing imperfections.
One of the most important themes of "Harrison Bergeron" is that equality is only useful in fields such as race, religion, and gender in any country, and personal attributes such as beauty, intelligence, strength are useless . If people change the plan of God, change the world and try to make the world equally perfect, the world will collapse. Kurt Vonnegut wrote this story to help us understand that equality does not mean superior men and women than other men and women. The theme of "Harrison Bergeron" is that equality is for rights, not for beauty, power, and wisdom.
Everyone is ultimately equal "(208) In short, Kurt Vonnegut's short story" Harrison Bergeron "is presupposed. The job title of Vonnegut Harrison Bergeron is a perfect person, very tall, handsome and smart. Society considers these ideal attributes, they are very tired of the 2081 advertisement of this story. We use the role of Harrison Bergeron to explain the danger of full equality for diverse populations. Geron