РефератыИностранный языкThThis Perfect Day Essay Research Paper This

This Perfect Day Essay Research Paper This

This Perfect Day Essay, Research Paper


This Perfect Day is probably Ira Levin’s greatest work of his


career. Levin’s work, despite being written in 1970, is very


plausible having realistic technology, such as scanners and


computers which watch over the entire family, the entire


population of the world. This novel could be used to show


the dangers of a Utopian society as well as being full of


anti-Communist and anti-racist sentiment. This Perfect Day


also displays the feeling that communist and segregated


institutions can be defeated, as the protagonist Chip over


powers the "family" and their vile Uni Comp as well as rising


above the segregated community he reaches after fleeing the


family.


This work could best be placed in an area of the curriculum


where it is the students job to learn that although everyone


might not be equal, nor should they be, they are still human


and deserve to be treated with the respect and kindness we


would expect to be treated with. This work could be used in


conjunction with other works of literature that display the


same ideals against communism and discrimination as well as


a lack of compassion for others. Other works that could be


used in cohorts with Levin’s This Perfect Day, are


Harrison Bergeron by Kurt Vonnegut and even the


Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood. Both of these


novels show the dangers of trying to create a Utopian


society and the chaos it causes. In Harrison Bergeron,


handicapping has become an American institution and it is


the governments responsibility to make sure that everyone is


equal in every way which ends up causing chaos and


rebellion. The Handmaid’s Tale shows the dangers of when


an extreme group takes over the United States after a


nuclear holocaust, with women being placed in a submissive


role to men, only being used to reproduce. This Perfect


Day could also be used in a section with novels such as


Uncle Tom’s Cabin which portray the evils of racism and


discrimination, just as the land where Chip ends up after


escaping the family, is very racist and segregated. He is


forced to endure the taunts and tortures of the folks who had


fought Uni from the beginning, yet he rises above these


bounds to return and destroy Uni Comp, thereby destroying


the family.


This Perfect Day begins in a land that has been unified


under, Uni Comp, a large computer that monitors all family


activities and controls any portions of their daily lives lies


deep in a cave below the Swiss Alps. The computer decides


on the work, residence, consumption of goods, whether they


will marry and if so whether they will have children.


Promotion of the family’s good is the main importance in any


member’s life. "Losing’s the same as winning" is one of the


phrases taught to small children. "Hate" and "fight" are dirty


words while fuck is not. Genetics has progressed to the


point where skin color is universally tan, while body shape is


unisex, and facial features are programmed, with most


members containing brown slanted eyes. The family is trying


to genetically remove such undesired elements of life such as


aggressiveness and egotism while implanting docility and


loving kindness in their place. While searching for the genetic


basis to these undesired elements, Uni Comp subjects every


member of the family to monthly treatments which contain


vaccines, contraceptives, and tranquilizers, as well as some


substance that reduces one’s sex drive down to only being


able to perform on Saturday night. All of this is watched


over by one’s counselor, one who watches the members


individual mental health very closely.


The novel starts early in the life of a boy named Chip, or Li


RM35M4419, his official ‘family’ given name. His


grandfather, Papa Jan had given him the nickname Chip.


Chip had always though his grandfather was a bit eccentric,


twisting words and displaying feelings that did not fall in line


with the rest of the ‘family’s’, Chip thought that his


grandfather might be a sick member. On a family trip to the


biggest tourist attraction on the planet, Uni Comp, Papa Jan


leads Chip downstairs, without touching scanners as they


pass, to a large cold room filled with large black boxes.


Papa Jan begins telling Chip how he helped build Uni Comp


and this is the real computer, not the pastel posies upstairs


for the tourists to view. Chip feels unsure because he has


lied to Uni by not touching the scanners and now it does not


know where he is. He also wonders why Uni Comp would


lie to them and why Papa Jan brought him down here. This


is Chip’s first experiences with anti-family feelings and those


associated with sick members. As Chip grows up, he


continues having thoughts that go against the grain.


Everything about his unified world seems strange and not


quite right, but these feelings are quickly suppressed at the


end of each month when it is time for his monthly treatment.


As time goes on, Chip explores his feelings, sometimes


putting off a treatment for a day or two so that he becomes


more aware of his surroundings. Eventually, a band of folks


like himself notices Chip. They too are dissatisfied with their


current lives and how Uni represses their thoughts and


feelings, as well as action

s with it’s prescribed monthly


treatments. They show him how to act so that he can get his


monthly treatments reduced and begin to explore his new


found wants and desires. This band meets and talk about


how they wish the world were better and they also skip off


for un-repressed sex and to smoke tabacco. Eventually,


Chip wants more. He wants more freedom, and he wants


the leader of the pack’s girlfriend, Lilac. He eventually


explores, finding that there are many places in the world


such as Madagascar and others where un-treated people


live not under the watchful eye of Uni Comp. He also finds


that the leader of the group, King also knows of these


islands, but is too afraid to go despite his cool outer


appearance. Eventually, in a sudden rage, Chip is caught, his


treatments increased to normal. Once treated Chip admits to


all he knows and tells everything about the sick members


leading the group to be broken up and for all the "sick"


member’s treatments to be returned to normal. Chip lives


how a good member should, until the end of one month


when he spies a leaf on a wet rock and considers the


possibilities. He could make a small flesh colored covering


that goes over his arm and it would not allow the treatments


to penetrate his skin. What would happen when he was not


treated at all. He would be able to explore all of his feelings


to the fullest. After a few months of planning and calculating


without treatment. Chip sneaks his way to Africa where he


has found that Lilac now lives. He steals her away and of


course she resists, after she says some nasty things a few


weeks later, he rapes her which pushes her even further


away. But eventually as her last treatment wears off she


begins to agree with Chip and at first says she’ll only go to


the island with him, then they’ll go their separate ways, but


then she says she will stay with him once they arrive as well.


Eventually they reach the island and find nothing but


segregation and racism against those who were former


members of the family by those whom originally rebelled


against Uni Comp. Chip becomes dissatisfied with his life on


the island as well. He decides he will only truly be happy and


free once he destroys Uni Comp and releases the family


from it’s grip. He formulates a plan and a party and sets out


to destroy the true Uni Comp. The one that lies deep under


the mountains. He and his party set out, but are tricked by


one member of the party who really was a spy. He takes


them deep into the mountains where they meet the


programmers of Uni Comp, who due to the bands ingenuity


in trying to destroy Uni Comp, want them to join the group


of programmers. They agree and live their lives in luxury


served in any way they could possible imagine, while looking


over the needs and concerns of the family. Chip never loses


sight of his true goal though and eventually when another


band of rebels is caught, he takes the impounded explosives


and sets out to destroy Uni Comp. Wei, the head


programmer as well as one of the main figure heads along


with Christ, Wood and Marx in designing the new unified


world, is the only thing standing in his way once he reaches


his destination and he fights him. Chip eventually traps Wei


and leaves him to die in the explosion. The family is now free


of Uni’s grip and Chip heads off to find Lilac.


The only real controversial element of Ira Levin’s novel is the


fact that Chip rapes Lilac. Rape has occurred in other works


studied before in the curriculum. Such as in the Kind Arthur


stories and The Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison. This issue


was also dealt with in novels read by students in seventh


grade, as in So Far From the Bamboo Grove. The rape


that occurs in this work is really no different from any that


occurred in any other novel listed here. It is no worse in any


way, and even shows how wrong this act really is. Lilac is


hurt by Chip and tries to leave him several times after this


event occurs and Chip sees how wrong he was in


committing this act and must learn to control his new found


animal urges. The only other controversial material are


swears, and those have been scattered throughout any


novels already read by students even as young as eighth


grade, such as many of the John Steinbeck novels read in


that curriculum. There is nothing in This Perfect Day that


students haven’t already experienced in other works of


literature already in the curriculum.


The only large worthwhile literary review found, that was


more than a sentence or two was, "This Perfect Hell" by


Ralph Raico. Raico is a history professor at SUNY College


in Buffalo and published his review in American Enterprise.


(Sep/Oct 98, Vol. 9 Issue 5, p82, 1p.) Raico speaks of


Levin’s other works, but says that This Perfect Day was by


far his best and deserves to be filmed just as many others


such as Rosemary’s Baby and Sliver were. He gives nothing


but praise to the novel, he says, " This Perfect Day belongs


to the genre of "dystopian" or anti-utopian novels, like


Huxley’s Brave New World and Orwell’s 1984. Yet it is


more satisfying than either." He is very enthusiastic about the


quality and meaningfulness of Levin’s novel and gives it the


highest regards.


327

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