Table of Contents
- 1 What effects do the pills have on Jonas?
- 2 What effects do the pills have on the citizens in the giver?
- 3 How did Jonas feel after taking the pills?
- 4 What do the pills symbolize the giver?
- 5 What were the pills in the giver?
- 6 What does the pill do in the giver?
- 7 Why does Jonas stop taking his pill *?
- 8 Why do you think the people of Jonas’s community are required to take pills after the stirrings begin what do you think some of the consequences of this practice might be?
What effects do the pills have on Jonas?
The pills stifled the libido (sex drive), so actually they were a form of chemical castration! In a world of sameness, there was no place for opposites of anything, including the sexes and intense emotional feelings. Jonas ‘s mother explained to him that adolescents and adults took them until they…
What effects do the pills have on the citizens in the giver?
The pills suppress sexual desires and censor the citizens’ emotions. Jonas’ society values conformity, equality, censorship, and compliance. Natural sexual emotions threaten to undermine the society’s social structure, particularly the Matching of Spouses.
How has life changed for Jonas since he stopped taking his pills?
It’s the same life that you would have, if you had not been chosen as my successor.” Explain what the Giver means. The others live in a sheltered life. The Give and Jonas know things that the rest of the community can never know.
How did Jonas feel after taking the pills?
Jonas is pleased to have grown up enough to have to take the pills, but he tries to remember the dream—he liked the feelings it gave him. However, the pill works quickly, and the pleasures of the dream are gone.
What do the pills symbolize the giver?
The pill represents suppression of desires, which takes away the freedom to choose a mate. As a result, there are no biological families living together in the community. Another significant symbol is the color red. It is the first color that Jonas notices on an apple and in Fiona’s hair.
Why did people take pills in the giver?
According to community rules, Jonas must take a pill to stop “the stirrings,” or the onset of sexual desire during puberty. Jonas’s mother gives him the pills after he talks about an erotic dream in which he wanted to bathe Fiona, which reveals Jonas’s burgeoning sexuality.
What were the pills in the giver?
To stop the Stirrings, the citizens are required to take pills. These pills are taken by children in the early stages of adolescence, and then for the rest of their lives, including as adults, until they are released. The people are required to take those pills until they enter the House of the Old.
What does the pill do in the giver?
the stirrings
According to community rules, Jonas must take a pill to stop “the stirrings,” or the onset of sexual desire during puberty. Jonas’s mother gives him the pills after he talks about an erotic dream in which he wanted to bathe Fiona, which reveals Jonas’s burgeoning sexuality.
Why did Jonas throw away his pills?
The next morning, Jonas doesn’t take his pill. He believes “There could be love.” Jonas no longer wants to suppress his feelings and obey the rules. Jonas begins feeling more entitled and jaded about his community, which is why he decides to throw away his pill to suppress the Stirrings.
Why does Jonas stop taking his pill *?
Jonas stops taking his pills because he wants to feel emotions beyond what everyone is “allowed” to feel (that would be nothing). He also desires the feeling of wanting something, rather than be complacent.
Why do you think the people of Jonas’s community are required to take pills after the stirrings begin what do you think some of the consequences of this practice might be?
They take human decisions away. Why do you think the people of Jonas’s community are required to take pills after the Stirrings begin? They try to balance the two people together.
Did Jonas take pills the giver?