I recently finished Divergent, by Veronica Roth.
Divergent is the story of sixteen year old Beatrice Prior, who lives in a world
where everyone fits into one of the five factions. Candor, for those who
believe in truth and honesty, Abnegation, for those who are selfless, Amity,
for those who believe in peace and love and happiness, Erudite, for those who
wish to peruse knowledge, and lastly Dauntless, for those who are reckless and
brave. Beatrice, who comes from Abnegation takes the test after she’s turned
sixteen that will decide what her permanent faction will be. However, the test
comes back inconclusive, instead of coming back with one specific faction that
she would belong to, she comes back with three. Erudite, Dauntless, and
Abnegation. Beatrice ultimately has to
decide whether to pick between Abnegation, where her family and friends lie,
but she does not feel she truly belongs. Or Dauntless, a faction she knows
little of.
I think the
author makes Tris start out in Abnegation as a stiff because it gives her a
more compassionate personality. While she does not feel she is completely
selfless, Tris has many qualities that make her selfless subconsciously. For
example in the simulation that determined her Divergence she throws herself in
front of a viscous attack dog to protect a little girl. When her friend Al is
bullied during training to become Dauntless there is a scene where he will have
knives thrown at him because he continues to miss the target. Tris knows this
is wrong and immediately steps in his place. Along from the fact that Roth
wanted Tris to be in Abnegation so that she could have a divergent result, I
think she placed her in Abnegation at the start to give her heroine a more versatile
personality.
It can also
be said of Roth that she placed Tris in Dauntless to give her the brave
personality trait. Through transforming herself into a Dauntless Tris learns
the importance of bravery. She doesn’t realize it because it is so natural to
her, but she commits acts of bravery all the time. After almost being killed
during Dauntless initiation, she is scared of her attackers, but also seeks vengeance.
She does not spend most of the book cowering, instead she is placed immediately
in the role of the underdog as a “stiff” and therefore the least likely to be
brave. She proves this wrong though in the paintball scene, where she climbs up
the Ferris wheel to get a better view of the other team, placing her life in
danger with each foot higher. Veronica Roth places Tris in Dauntless so that
Tris can learn the importance of bravery.
The traits that
Tris inherits from being Divergent in both Dauntless and Abnegation help her to
become a better heroine. Tris learns that being selfless and being brave are
often intertwined. This is often true, not just in the Divergent trilogy. In
many books the main characters heroism is influenced by their selflessness and
their bravery often battling each other, and ultimately working together.
Veronica Roth placed Tris in Abnegation and Dauntless so that Tris could learn
two important traits that would help her later in the series.
I also read Divergent and I agree with what you said in your blog post. As well I like how you mentioned that selflessness and bravery often go together. I believe that is a central theme in the book Divergent and also a good life lesson
ReplyDelete-Lillian