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start page 111: start of chapter to page 114: \then she looked at her w…

Question

start page 111:
start of chapter
to page 114:
\then she
looked at her
watch, waved,
and hurried
toward the
entrance.\

  1. consider this quotation: \always, in the

dream, it seemed as if there were a
destination: a something — he could not
grasp what — that lay beyond... but he did
not know how to get there.\ (112)
what might the \something...that lay
beyond\ be? think about jonass hopes
and make a prediction. rl.3

  1. how does training to be the receiver

affect jonass ability to interact with
others? rl.3
start page 114:
\jonas stood for
a moment ...\
to page 121:
end of chapter

  1. in what way is fionas hair a problem for

the community? rl.5
unit 3: the giver
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Explanation:

Brief Explanations
  1. For question 1: Jonas longs for individuality, genuine emotion, and escape from his community's sameness. The "something...that lay beyond" is likely a place with true feelings, memories, and freedom—what he later discovers as Elsewhere. This aligns with his quiet hope to break the community's restrictive rules.
  2. For question 2: Training as The Receiver gives Jonas memories of pain, joy, and other emotions the community erased. He can no longer relate to peers who lack these experiences, making him feel isolated and unable to connect with others on a meaningful, authentic level.
  3. For question 3: Jonas's ability to see Fiona's hair as red (a color the community eliminated) reveals that sameness is breaking. Her hair is a problem because it is a visible reminder that the community's forced uniformity is not absolute, threatening the system that suppresses individuality and natural variation.

Answer:

  1. The "something...that lay beyond" is most likely Elsewhere: a place outside Jonas's community that has genuine emotions, individual identity, and all the sensory experiences (like color, pain, and joy) that his community has erased. This matches Jonas's unspoken hope to escape the restrictive, emotionless sameness of his current life.
  2. Training to be The Receiver isolates Jonas from others. He gains memories of intense emotions and experiences that his peers and family cannot comprehend, so he can no longer share authentic thoughts or feelings with them, creating a growing rift between Jonas and the rest of the community.
  3. Fiona's hair is a problem because Jonas (who is gaining the ability to see color) can perceive it as red, a natural variation the community's "sameness" protocols were supposed to eliminate. This visible break from uniformity threatens the community's core ideology that suppresses individuality and natural human diversity.