The society has misunderstood the context of equality from equality of opportunity to equality of outcome.
Explanation:
Harrison Bergeron is a dystopian science-fiction short story by American writer Kurt Vonnegut, first published in October 1961.
The novel is an exploration of the fine balance between what equality of opportunity in a free society means in connection to what complete and total equality in a society would amount to.
This is a satire on collectivization in that if all humans are equally smart, weak or physically able there will be no growth or no scope of growth within that society and no potential for human development.
"She walks in beauty, like the night
Of cloudless climes and starry skies;
And all that’s best of dark and bright
Meet in her aspect and her eyes;
Thus mellowed to that tender light
Which heaven to gaudy day denies."
This stanza is about a rare and exceptional kind of beauty. Byron is trying to communicate a certain perfection of beauty, and he turns to a peculiar feature of the night sky to explain what he means. On a clear night (that's what he means by "cloudless climes"), the stars can be so bright as to light up the darkness, but in a "mellow," subtle way—not the kind of overly bright, "gaudy" sunlight of the daytime. For Byron, the starlight is perfect—it brings together "all that's best of dark and bright." In that balance, Byron sees perfect beauty, and he says that the subject of his poem (the "she" he keeps talking about) is as beautiful as that particular kind of rare, perfect, "tender light."
There are many forms of communication in making speeches. If there is technology available, the use of pictures, videos, charts, and graphics, are highly recommendable. This helps give the audience a clear picture of what the speaker is saying. It will enable them to visualize the content of the speech, and further absorb the knowledge that is being sent to them.
The Canterbury Tales, written towards the end of the fourteenth century by Geoffrey Chaucer, is considered an estates satire because it effectively criticizes, even to the point of parody, the main social classes of the time. These classes were referred to as the three estates, the church, the nobility, and the peasantry, which for a long time represented the majority of the population.
Answer:
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