A Literary Comparison Of A Clockwork Orange and The Crucible.

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A Literary Comparison Of

A Clockwork Orange and The Crucible

        The existence of evil in the world is a universal question that is often contemplated.  Anthony Burgess and Arthur Miller in their novels A Clockwork Orange and The Crucible address this question of evil.  One of these stories is set in the future, and the other in the past confirming the belief that the human struggle between good and evil is timeless and applies to every person in society.  Throughout history numerous examples of leaders have attempted to control the nature of people within their society through systems of punishment and reward.  This system had failed continuously to control the entire population because people still retain their ability to choose.  It is said that once a person loses his free will, he ceases to be a person.  This is the struggle confronting the protagonists in both A Clockwork Orange and The Crucible.  The fifteen-year old rebel Alex and the respected farmer John Proctor refuse to conform to the rules of their oppressive societies, and as a result are denied the freedom to choose between good and evil, therefore becoming less than human.  

        Both Alex and John Proctor live in highly oppressive societies from which they feel alienated, and therefore decide to rebel against.  The futuristic setting of A Clockwork Orange is one of a constructive, depersonalized society where the government has far too much control over people’s lives.  They are forced to live in strictly regimented communities, and their daily life is dreary.  “Alex’s England is a socialized nightmare.” (De Vitis, 106)  It is because of this meaningless life that Alex chooses to rebel against his society, committing so many brutal acts of violence that he soon becomes desensitized to the horror he is creating.  When questioned by his correctional officer as to why he acts this way, Alex replies “…badness is of the self, the one, the you or me. They of the government and the judges and the schools cannot allow badness because they cannot allow they self… what I do, I do because I like to do it.  (Burgess, 34)  Alex fully

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realizes that the controlled society he lives is one that tries to eliminate all individuality.  This causes him to act out in violence against authority as a means of expressing himself and retaining his personal freedom.  Similarly, the historical setting of Arthur Miller’s The Crucible is one of a lifeless and highly conservative community in the small town of Salem, Massachusetts, in the late seventeenth century.  The citizens of the town are narrow-minded, hardworking people who live in constant fear of sin and the Devil, and whose habitual lives revolve around the church.  “Salem was governed by a ...

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