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why is the giver challenged/banned?
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message 1:
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K
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Jun 25, 2009 11:09AM

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http://bannedbookschallenge.blogspot....
because of the use of euthanasia and suicide
even though, as the above article points out, it makes those tactics seem bad, not good.

"Utopian society that relies on euthanasia and suicide to create the perfect community"
i dont see that in the book (i'm only a blissfully unaware teenager, so i obviously wouldn't quite yet haha) and how do they use suicide to create a perfect community? i am extremely confused. although that is very interesting, how DO they create a perfect society? please explain!



euthanasia seems the obvious one, as jonas 'recieves' later on in the book the answer.

There was also murder involved, though. The killing of the babies just because they did not measure up to the society's standards.


um i know that euthanasia does not mean suicide (im not that stupid). i was taking an excerpt from the website that lisa sent me which was "Utopian society that relies on euthanasia and suicide to create the perfect community"

euthanasia |ˌyoōθəˈnā zh ə|
noun
the painless killing of a patient suffering from an incurable and painful disease or in an irreversible coma. The practice is illegal in most countries.

"the action of killing oneself intentionally" and it may not have to do with depression at all.

"the action of killing oneself intentionally" and it may not have to do with depression at all."
You're right, I meant to say OFTEN due to depression. Somehow that one word got left out, sorry.
What I was trying to do was separate euthanasia, helping someone kill themselves, from suicide, someone killing his/herself by his/herself.
In "The Giver," if I remember correctly, there were some people who were given the jobs of helping the old to end their lives. That would be euthenasia, not suicide.
Kenza, I did not mean to be criticizing your wording, I meant to be nitpicky about the people who were giving suicide as a reason for banning the book.
In any case, to get back to answering your question, the society in "The Giver" used euthenasia to "improve" its society by ending the lives of those who were of no longer any value to the society and so had become what they saw as nothing but an impairment. They thought why keep them around if they could not give anything back to the community any more. That's why they killed the babies that did not measure up, also. They thought if they did not look like they were going to grow up big and strong and valuable, why bother with them? Just kill them and devote valuable time and energy to raising the babies that would be of value.


"the action of killing oneself intentionally" and it may not have to do with depression at all."
You're right, I meant to say OFTEN due to depression. Someh..."
oh, haha yea. i see. and its such a brutal part of the book. i just didnt see how suicide fit in, and now i see it didnt at all :)

in the book, yes, it is basically murder, but with the elderly, some of them probably werent even quite sure what it would do to them.
and in our society, well, it's not exactly suicide all the time, but u cant compare because it IS illegal in the US.
This is a great discussion. I'm moving it to another folder, though, because this folder is for discussing the books we're reading as a group.
Is it illegal everywhere in the US? It's one of those things that would be jurisdictional, probably at a state level.


...sorry about the rant, but I'm still mad about the whole experience. Imagine, one parent dictating what every child gets to read.
It's so sad that the principal caved.
I was thinking of assisted suicide, Lisa, by what you said above. But technically "pulling the plug" on someone who is alive but will die without the machines is also a form of euthanasia, don't you think?
I was thinking of assisted suicide, Lisa, by what you said above. But technically "pulling the plug" on someone who is alive but will die without the machines is also a form of euthanasia, don't you think?

yes, it seems so. ive looked it up to confirm, and yes, as lisa said, the enforcement depends on the state.

I was thinking of assisted suicide, Lisa, by what you said above. But technically "pulling the plug" on someone who is alive but will die without the machines..."
well i suppose it is, but in the case of the book, no one had a choice- if they didnt want to die, they still had to. but i got a feeling that some, if not all, of them didnt quite know it was going to kill them, they might still be under the impression they were going Elsewhere.
anyone think the same way? or am i totally off the mark ^-^

anyone think the same way? or am i totally off the mark ^-^
I think the old went willingly to be killed simply because that was the way their society worked. Things had been that way for so long no one ever thought for themselves anymore, to question whether or not letting themselves be killed off was right or wrong. Their society just thought that was the right thing to do.
If you read the next two books in the trilogy,
Gathering Blue and Messenger, you'll learn more about what happens to those few who did decide to think for themselves and do go Elsewhere instead of to their death.

oh i see. i didnt know that it was a trilogy, i thought that they were just other books he had written.


mmk. ill consider reading. (i probably will ^_^)
I didn't know about the other books, either. I'm thrilled! Thanks Joseph!
Do you folks think the old people really understood what release meant? I got the impression that everyone was as confused as the main character except people in the jobs that actually released people.
Do you folks think the old people really understood what release meant? I got the impression that everyone was as confused as the main character except people in the jobs that actually released people.

Do you folks think the old people really understood what release meant? I got the impression that everyone was as confused..."
yeah, thats what i was trying 2 say earlier..."but i got a feeling that some, if not all, of them didnt quite know it was going to kill them, they might still be under the impression they were going Elsewhere.
anyone think the same way? or am i totally off the mark ^-^ "


And I have to agree with apol about their being at least one suicide in the book. Didn't the trainee before Jonas, who was actually the old Giver's daughter (I believe) commit suicide when she couldn't take what the position entailed?
The Giver is a very thought provoking book. I look forward to reading the other two in the series.
Yes, the previous trainee committed suicide. I haven't read the sequels but they are on my to-read list. Has anyone else read them?


message 37:
by
Kelly (Maybedog), Minister of Illicit Reading
(last edited Jan 28, 2010 03:38AM)
(new)
I think the whole point is that they don't want their kids to think about these things at all. That's why religious zealots (not specifying which religion here, at this level they are all the same) (and I'm not saying religious zealots are the only ones who do this) home-school their kids and don't let them watch t.v. but sometimes let them play violent video games (I know one such family that let their kids play grand theft auto which is ghastly.) They don't want anything contradicting what they are teaching their kids because they are afraid their children will "stray" and come to a different conclusion than they did. They are most threatened by ideas which sound reasonable (hence the lack of fear that their kids will turn into murdering car thieves from playing the above game). I find it very sad.
Not only sad, but dangerous. These kids graduate from high school and arrive at college and university totally unprepared for challenging reads, open discussions etc. Or, they might think that they can act the same way in university as they could in high school, simply stating they will not read a book they don't agree with (or they will try to get books banned from university curriculums as well).
My mom grew up in a very controlling household and when she got to college she couldn't handle it and had a "nervous breakdown" and flunked out of school. (She'd be a straight A student.) My grandfather had to pull strings to get her into another university.
Did your grandfather ever realise that it might have been your mother's strict and controlling upbringing that caused her troubles? I hope so.
Well, I'm glad your grandfather was more tolerant with the grandchildren. Too bad, that he couldn't have at least apologised a bit to your mother (and his other children), but I know from personal experience that parents often believe not only that everything they do is right, but that it is all done "for the best." My family was (and is) pretty controlling as well, though with them, it is not so much control of reading materials etc., but "discipline through rude verbal comments" (and you never heard about your successes, just your failures).

David wrote: "I know from my own experience that another reason this book is challenged is because of the description of "the Stirrings," the pills to quell them, and Jonas's dreams of washing Fiona. When I was..."
Lol, like middle school kids don't think about "stirrings"...
Lol, like middle school kids don't think about "stirrings"...
Sure, keep the "kiddies" ignorant!! All that does is cause problems and unhealthy sexual development. We should get out of the Dark Ages.

That's so true and it is true about many books that are challenged or banned. "Concerned" parents might count the number of swear-words in a book or they might make a decision based on hearsay or maybe having read a description or editorial, but they often have not actually read the book in question. Why should anyone take seriously the complaints of individuals who are not willing (or maybe too lazy) to read the book(s) they deem offensive etc.?
Books mentioned in this topic
Pride of the Lions: The Untold Story of the men and women who made the Lisbon Lions (other topics)Messenger (other topics)
Gathering Blue (other topics)