Alex Walkinshaw Essays

  • Advantages And Disadvantages Of Citizen Advocacy

    2171 Words  | 9 Pages

    In a layman’s term, advocacy is the move to make the voice of the marginalised and vulnerable people heard. Everybody have rights and needs that must be met but some group of people, due to their inability or difficulty to voice out their minds, are unable to meet these needs or demand for their rights and entitlements; when it comes to making decisions that pertain to their lives, their voice and feelings are (sometimes) being ignored and they are treated as if they do not exist. Advocacy is the

  • Analysis Of A Clockwork Orange By Anthony Burgess

    1840 Words  | 8 Pages

    Fifteen year old Alex de Large is the narrator and main protagonist of “A clockwork orange”, who, along with his 'droogs ' (comrades), rampages through a dystopian Britain committing random acts of 'ultraviolence ', brutal rapes, robbery and ultimately murder. Alex 's other great source of intense enjoyment is listening to classical music, and above all the music of Beethoven or 'Ludwig van ' , which seems to heighten his pleasure and intensify his savage and psychopathic impulses. He is a classic

  • Movie Vigilantes Film Analysis

    837 Words  | 4 Pages

    The 12 Biggest Badass Movie Vigilantes “Revenge is sweet and not fattening,” Alfred Hitchcock noted—and indeed it is, especially on the big screen. For some reason, it's always sweeter when it’s delivered outside the justice system, by citizens unafraid to take the law into their own hands. Here are 12 of the most monumental movie vigilantes, but please, don't repeat their epic cinematic actions at home. 12. Paul Kersey (Death Wish I-V) After his wife gets murdered and his daughter sexually

  • Persuasive Essay On A Clockwork Orange

    824 Words  | 4 Pages

    idealistic propaganda of what should a perfect society be and how it should act. Alex is subjected to pictures of what is deemed “bad” while given a drug that will make him feel violently ill when he thinks about the pictures in front of him, all the while being observed from just behind him out of sight by the ones who are pulling the strings and “fixing Alex”. This scene could be the observers being “society” and Alex being the “individuals”. It would be society that would display what the people

  • A Clockwork Orange Violence Essay

    661 Words  | 3 Pages

    Alex’s violence is a sign of a revolt. However, Alex is just one of the examples of individuals who do not yet understand what they are revolting against. He believes that violence is a way of expressing himself freely and a sign of his freedom. When the government takes that from him, he loses his sense

  • What Is A Clockwork Orange A Dystopian Society?

    311 Words  | 2 Pages

    protagonist Alex, a fifteen year old, who along with his droogs; Dim, Pete, and Georgie, go around the city at night causing chaos and panic among the older citizens of this city. Alex and his friends roam the streets looking for people to rape, steal from, and beat up. The novel starts with part one, and in this part Alex narrates his life as a delinquent and the different crimes that he and his friends commit. Towards the end of this part Alex’s friends betray him during a crime and Alex ends up in

  • Article Summary: The Brain On Trial

    623 Words  | 3 Pages

    actions as other criminals would be. One example given is, “Alex”, whose sexual preference began to transform and developed a strong interest in child pornography, the author informs is that Alex stated this was “`something he had never previously done`” (qtd in Eagleman 432) and had wanted to stop, except his pleasure drive was in overload. Web sites, magazines, and subtle passes to his step-daughter were all a part of the downhill spiral Alex seemed to being going down, after being found out by his

  • What Is The 14th Amendment Essay

    902 Words  | 4 Pages

    After slavery, African Americans in the south were in a time of change. Though they were free from slavery, whippings, and auctions, I believe life became difficult for them even after slavery ended. Racism began to grow increasingly, as many could not accept the fact that there was no more slavery. It became stricter when the government in the South enforced laws called Black Codes. Those laws were set to grant only certain rights to people of color. Employment for black people was unfair, as they

  • Nadsat In A Clockwork Orange

    1057 Words  | 5 Pages

    of the book. This addressed indirectly in “Nadsat: The Argot and its implications in Anthony Burgess’s, A Clockwork Orange”. It says “That is not to say that the author is totally unconcerned with moral values. No doubt he deplores the actions of Alex as much as we do. What he is doing is creating a hopeless version of society taken over by youth. The youth do not share the values of their elders, nor do they admit any sort of normal associations with them. Parents are not obeyed, nor do they set

  • Candide And A Clockwork Orange: Character Analysis

    718 Words  | 3 Pages

    Have you ever read a book and laughed at something that made you think afterwards? This is called thoughtful laughter. Thoughtful laughter is when a situation utilizes humor to provoke reflection. Candide and a Clockwork Orange both demonstrate thoughtful laughter but in different ways. The authors use of satirical humor contributes to this. In Volataires Candide, there are endless examples of thoughtful laughter, however the one that is recognized immediately is that of the character by the name

  • A Clockwork Orange Dystopian Analysis

    706 Words  | 3 Pages

    reader does not have any attachment or emotions towards Alex. This all changes when Alex and his friends start to do horrendous acts of violence. The reader quickly begins to form hatred towards Alex. However, as the novel progresses the readers emotion towards Alex start to change. By the end of the novel the reader has an emotional attachment to Alex. Through the effective use of Alex’s narration Burgess manages to change the readers view. Alex is an evil, violent, teenage criminal. Alex’s violent

  • How Does Anthony Burgess Shows The Oncoming Issues Of An Advanced Age?

    388 Words  | 2 Pages

    essence, the subject will remain as he was before, sincerely scathed. Alex, the narrator and protagonist of the story, is a 15-year-old gang member, who assaults, rapes, and murders innocent citizens for his own pleasure. His three other gang members, Dim, Pete, and Georgie, are lead and enticed by Alex. But after some disagreements and violent confrontations between them, Alex is left wounded for the police by his supposed friends. Alex is a very twisted character that enjoys the troubles he erupts. After

  • Clockwork Orange Research Paper

    1184 Words  | 5 Pages

    who chooses the bad perhaps in some ways better than a man who has the good imposed upon him?” (Burgess 93). The book Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess is composed almost entirely of rape, murder, and evil. The book follows a young teen by the name Alex, who by nature, falls into criminal activity wherever he goes since “to devastate is easier and more spectacular than to create.” (Burgess 152). After being convicted of murder, he is subject to a government rehab experiment. He loses his ability to

  • A Clockwork Orange Morality Quotes

    396 Words  | 2 Pages

    Alex may have been selfish and conniving but his character and the others like him did have a strong grasp on the concept that life was worth living. Without the ability of option to pursue evil acts which was an impulse inside his well being, his ability to act human was affected. The freedom of creating these choices is what makes humans, human. Therefore, without this freedom he is driven to attempt suicide. Morality is warped into savagery. Throughout A Clockwork Orange, Alex believes society’s

  • Free Will In A Clockwork Orange

    514 Words  | 3 Pages

    Alex portrays no moral value during the novella, “A Clockwork Orange”. He does however have the choice to change his situation, which is something that Atticus Finch and Thomas More don’t have, because they can’t live with their conscience. The question, “What’s it going to be then, eh?” (Burgess, 2011: 3, 57, 97), is used at the beginning of every part of the novella. This question marks the significance that free will and the ability to choose has in this novella. This question is sometimes asked

  • Clockwork Orange Analysis

    1036 Words  | 5 Pages

    dystopian novel by Anthony Burgess, printed in 1962. The story takes place in a futuristic society that features a grouping of extreme youth violence. The protagonist Alex narrates the story of his violent acts and his encounter with the authorities trying to reform him from his evil self. However Burgess tries to persuade the reader that Alex is not such a bad person, as he appears to be by hiding a big part of the evidence of his violence through certain techniques. The biggest of them being Alex’s use

  • Charlie Kaufman Monologue

    1182 Words  | 5 Pages

    Recently I had the honor of shadowing the acclaimed screenwriter Charlie Kaufman as he brings to life Ted Chiang’s “Story of Your Life” now titled Rings in Time. A soon to be a blockbuster hit that is out of this word. It should be on everyone must watch list this Oscar season. Before I began my work with Mr. Kaufman I had the pleasure of reading the original work by Ted Chiang. It is a wonderful short story told in the first person about the arrival of seven lagged aliens with a unique view on time

  • Narrative Techniques In Animal Farm

    3681 Words  | 15 Pages

    How does narrative technique be showed in the book Animal Farm by George Orwell? word count: 3733 Contents Page ——Introduction ——Body —Rhetorical devices -Personification -Satire -Rhetorical Question -Metaphor/ Allegory —Space Structure ——Conclusion ——Bibliography Introduction The book Animal Farm is written by well-known British novelist George Orwell. The book is written in 1945. The form of the book is really in Aesop’s fables’ style. George Orwell

  • Why Is Beethoven Be Regarded As Having A Soul, An Intellect?

    490 Words  | 2 Pages

    The single appealing quality Burgess leaves Alex is his love of classical music, Beethoven in particular. This makes A Clockwork Orange an ethical puzzle. The following questions dazzled my mind as I started thinking about this aspect of the book. Is the love of Beethoven being a kind of cultural badge showing that someone can be civilised? Can this be regarded as having a soul, an intellect? Or that someone deserves to be treated as human because of their aesthetic tastes? I believe these questions

  • Comparing Violence And Music In Anthony Burgess's A Clockwork Orange

    751 Words  | 4 Pages

    As the novel progressed, the obvious juxtaposition between Alex and his love of crime, while also loving classical music became more apparent. Many would believe that the two have no similarities with each other, yet Alex accepts that there is a connection with the two. As A Clockwork Orange was made into a film, a Cambridge Film Handbook was written to provide insight into the cinematic, artistic, cultural, and sociopolitical importance of individual films by including essays by leading film scholars