Clay Milneck
Mrs. Castille
English IV2
22 February 2016
Evil or Good
In
A Clockwork Orange
Anthony Burgess presents the idea of whether it is better to be
bad by choice or forced to be good. Burgess uses motifs and overall symbols to tell the story of a
young and violent boy finding his own selfhood. One of the motifs he uses throughout the entire
book is the nadsat language. The nadsat language is a combination of multiple languages with a
very strong Russian influence. The language adds a barrier between the reader and Alex’s
extreme violence in the book forcing you to slowly evaluate him and follow him on his
transformation.
A Clockwork Orange
, is a vision of future Britain, one in which behavioral
adjustment is taken to extremes in the journey for saving a separated society. The novel is a
population in its pretragic hours, a nation in the beginnings of totalitarianism. The reader sees
the world through a youthful lens. Alex, a fifteen yearold criminal, is the antihero of the story,
an adolescent who battles to feel invigorated in a degenerate society that he doesn't exactly get it.
Burgess demonstrates to the reader that the most important symbol that denotes a general public
as dystopian is the absence of free will and uses this to uncover the crude motivation of an
oppressed world which is the prioritization of social control and proficiency over human instinct.
In Anthony Burgess’s novel
A Clockwork Orange
the main question that arises is whether it is
better to be willingly bad or unwillingly good, highlighting the importance of free will in being
human.
Milneck 2
A Clockwork Orange
is told in first person through the main character Alex, the fifteen
yearold anti hero. Alex and his gang of "droogs," go about during the night and commit crimes
such as homicide, assault, and robbery. In one of their worst acts, Alex and his friends make their ...