Harrison Bergeron Kurt Vonnegut Jr Kurt Vonnegut Jr
“Harrison Bergeron” Kurt Vonnegut Jr.
Kurt Vonnegut Jr. Born 1922 in Indianapolis. Wrote novels, stories and was an activist. His writings reflect cynicism against authority and humanism, using science fiction genre. “Harrison Bergeron” reflects his social and political critique by imagining a future world founded on absolute equality
Summary It's the year 2081, and George and Hazel Bergeron have a son, Harrison. Unfortunately for them, the government took him away when he was fourteen years old. See, someone once decided that Harrison Bergeron is of above-average intelligence, so he's had a radio implanted in his ear… One night in 2081, the Bergerons are sitting in front of the TV watching ballet… The Ballet is interrupted when one of the ballerinas has an urgent government news announcement to make. Harrison Bergeron has escaped!
• The announcement of an escaped convict is just what any boring ballet needs to liven things up, Harrison himself rips off the door to the stage and storms on screen. • He declares himself Emperor and takes one of the ballerinas as his Empress. • They dance and there's a lot of kissing. • But the Handicapper General, Diana Moon Glampers, doesn't seem to care much for kissing since shoots them both dead with a shotgun. • The Bergerons' television blows out and goes dark. Must have been a faulty bulb—no way it was government intervention, right? But then it turns out that George had gone to get a beer, so it appears he missed the whole thing. Hazel cries, but soon can't remember why. Life quickly returns to normal.
- Slides: 4