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Uglies uglies pretties specials extras
Uglies uglies pretties specials extras







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Westerfeld wrote three more books in the Uglies series ( Pretties, Specials, and Extras) in the two years after Uglies was published, and in 2018 he began writing four more that take place in the same universe a few decades after Tally’s story ends. Meanwhile, in “The Beautiful People,” Beaumont develops a world more like that of Uglies, in which people are required to change their appearance to fit in. Uglies was inspired by two short stories: “Liking What You See: A Documentary” by Ted Chiang, and Charles Beaumont’s “The Beautiful People.” In the fictional, documentary-style interviews that make up “Liking What You See,” Chiang presents a private boarding school where students’ ability to see beauty is turned off. Uglies, along with novels like Suzanne Collins’s Hunger Games series and Lois Lowry’s Giver quartet, do both: they all feature overbearing governments as well as explore the idea that the natural world is what will give their young protagonists the tools and skills they need to survive. He proposes that these novels engage with the idea of authority in two distinct ways that, in most cases, appear in these novels in tandem: they take that idea of control to a 1984-style extreme, and/or they do away with rules altogether and focus on the natural world. Westerfeld has suggested that Uglies, and other dystopian teen novels like it, are part of an understandable response to the increased surveillance and nonsensical rules teens today are subject to, both at school and at home. In interviews and essays, Westerfeld has also taken issue with the increasing interest in policing teens’ whereabouts and behavior, specifically as parents’ ability (or potential ability) to track teens through their phones, cars, and even dental implants have made headlines. In the 10 years prior to Uglies’ publication, cosmetic procedures on patients younger than 18 increased dramatically, from around 14,000 procedures in 1996 to 333,000 procedures in 2005. Today, medical associations differentiate between plastic surgery (which is reconstructive and corrects impairments like cleft palates or traumatic injuries) and cosmetic surgery (which is elective and includes procedures like breast augmentation, facelifts, and liposuction) it’s cosmetic surgery that Westerfeld takes issue with in Uglies.

uglies uglies pretties specials extras

Though people have been repairing bodies for millennia, elective surgery wasn’t much of a possibility until the mid to late 19th century, thanks to the development of anesthesia and antibiotics. The earliest mention of what would be considered plastic surgery today appears in the Edwin Smith Papyrus, a medical text dating to between 30 B.C. The Uglies series was inspired by the increasing availability of plastic surgery (especially for young people), as well as the increase in surveillance that Westerfeld sees young people experiencing.









Uglies uglies pretties specials extras