A Clockwork Orange Violence And Corruption

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A Clockwork Orange: Violence And Corruption Essay, Research Paper

A Clockwork Orange: Violence and Corruption

Alex, the fifteen year old narrator of Anthony Burgess’s novel, A Clockwork

Orange, lives in a society where violence reigns. This novel has a very direct

nature, and is often blunt to the point of offense, but this makes it more

powerful and helps to further its point. This point is that everyone is out for

themselves, whether they be the police, government or citizens of this society.

In this book, the police can be just as violent as Alex and his droogs,

or gang. In fact, by the end of the novel, his droogs have themselves become

the police. The police have no qualms about beating people almost to the point

of death as they do with Alex both at the beginning, ?…they all had a turn,

bouncing me from one to the other like some very weak bloody ball…and fisting

me in the yarbles and the [mouth] and the belly and dealing out kicks…I [was]

sick…on the floor…? (70) and at the end of the book for no other reason than

they feel like it. ?…It was all panting and thudding against this like

background of whirring farm engines…? (150) There seems to be no difference

between the people being beaten by streets punks such as Alex and the police,

who are supposed to protect them. The novel begins with the police doing little

to protect the citizens, for how else could a fifteen year old kid and three of

his friends rule the streets? They also seem to relish beating Alex for the

reason that they don’t get to do it often. However, by the third part of this

book, crime is almost non-existent, but the police are far more brutal.

Neither of these scenarios is the better of the two. In fact the cops are not

out to help the people, they only want to serve themselves. Alex, during his

first beating, confesses and hands his droogs to the police, but the police do

nothing to capture them. The reason the people are so afraid ?…then a bolt

drawn, then the door open an inch or so…? (19-20) is that they have to be,

since no one else seems to care about their well being.

The government is not much better. These corrupted individuals are only

out for themselves. They are in power, like it, and want to stay there as long

as possible. To achieve this end they will both tell the people what they want

and then do it for them. One example of this deals with crime. The citizens of

this society are fed up with it so the government gets rid of it using brutal

corrupt cops. ?The way that had been cleaned up, there being no longer any

dirty, ballooning slovos…? (132) Since the People are not seeing the crimes

of the police, they believe that the government is protecting them and so are

appeased. Another example of this deal more directly with Alex. The citizens

want everyone to be good and peaceful. The government to show this take away a

person’s free will to be bad. Thus the citizenry believe the criminals have

been reformed when in truth they have only been forced to do good, as they did

with Alex. Then when the people realize they prefer free will, the government

gives this back to Alex. The government is at the top and they like it there so

they will do anything to stay there.

Thought the government and the police are both very cruel to the people

this does not mean that the people themselves are good. This is shown in many

ways. One such way is that the police were once common citizens themselves so

it follows that their behavior is that of the people. Another example of this

involves one of Alex’s former victims. At the beginning of the book, Alex and

his droogs attack an old man carrying books. When Alex is released, this same

old man beats him in revenge. ?…starting to deal me malenky weak [hits in my

stomach]…? (144) The prey becomes the predator. This shows that given a

chance, even those who are supposed to be ?good? will stoop to the level of the

street punk. Another example of this is shown with the people who eventually

try to help Alex. F. Alexander, the writer of the book A Clockwork Orange from

whence the novel is named, does help Alex only for his own ends, and even harms

Alex “…I could [hear] music coming out of the wall, real gromky, and it had

dragged me out of my bit of sleep…” (166-167) if he thinks that will help his

cause more. These are just a few examples of how the people are just as corrupt

as the government.

Everyone in this novel is violent, from the cops to the government to the

old men who spend their days in the library. However, Alex’s and other

criminals, such as Pete, one of Alex’s former droogs, are in many ways better

than the other members of this society because they ?grow up.? They grow tired

of the violence and decide to settle down and start families. This is something

the citizens, police and government never learn. A young woman defends herself

by beating Alex at the beginning of the novel, and an old man beats him at the

end. The government change him one way at the beginning, and still not

satisfied, change him again at the end. The police beat him at the beginning

and the end. Even Alex’s social worker spits on him. However, maybe we see

hope for the future with the true change in Alex at the end of the novel.

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