The Long Walk
The Walk that Never Ends
Summary
The Long Walk by Stephen King is a dystopian horror novel
that is set place in an authoritarian, totalitarian version of the United
States where every year the government holds a contest where one hundred boys
age ranging from thirteen to eighteen participate in a brutal walking contest.
The rules are simple yet horrifying, maintain a walking speed of four miles an
hour and if you fall behind even a point below four miles for long enough, you
are shot by the soldiers escorting the group. There is only one winner and that
winner gets to choose whatever they want. The story follows a sixteen-year-old
boy named Ray Garraty and how he volunteered for the walk because of ambition
and the drive to have a better life for him, his mom, and his girlfriend. As
readers, we see Ray break physically, mentally, and emotionally in a system
that was specifically designed to break him.
Gender Representation
 |
| The Long Walk Movie Poster |
While
The Long Walk isn’t really marketed as a “gendered text,”
the entire novel talks about how masculinity is constructed. Masculinity is constructed
by the government, by society, and by the boys themselves. Although the walk is
met to be this brutal masculine competition where toughness is necessary for
survival, the boys consistently break these gender expectations. The walk
forces them to suppress emotion, yet many of the contestants, especially Ray
and another contestant Peter Mcvries open up to each other in deeply emotional
ways. Their conversations about fear, pain, and personal history about why they
got there show that vulnerability still exists even in a system that tries to
destroy it. Instead of acting like the stereotypical “tough boys” that the
government wanted them to do. Ray and Mcvries form a beautiful bond built on
empathy and support in such a short time, which becomes one of the novel’s
strongest critiques of traditional masculinity.
Dystopian World
 |
| The Long Walk |
The Long Walk fits extremely well within the dystopian genre
because it portrays a society where the government uses violence, fear, and public
display to maintain control. The annual walk itself is a disturbing form of government-controlled
entertainment, broadcast and celebrated as if it was some kind of sports event
even though the contestants are children being brutally murdered for slowing
down their walking pace. This contest reveals how normalized cruelty has become
in this society, and how the government manipulates citizens into just
accepting it. The rules of the walk strip the boys of their autonomy, reducing them
to bodies that can be monitored, punished, killed, and disposed of. Stephen
King’s world shows the classic patterns of a dystopian genre. By forcing young
boys into a deadly competition and turning their suffering into a public event,
the novel exposes how dystopian societies use control to keep power.
For Class Purposes
The Long Walk would be a good fit for this class because it shows a
different side of masculinity in a dystopian world. The whole competition is
supposed to be about being “tough” and not showing weakness, but the boys don’t
actually follow that. Ray and Mcvries especially open up to each other, talk
about their emotions, and question why they’re expected to act a certain way. By showing how an authoritarian government manipulates young
men into performing certain versions of masculinity, the book exposes the harm
these expectations cause. This makes The Long Walk an ideal text for discussing
how gender norms are constructed and enforced. Also, how dystopian worlds often
use gender as a tool of control.
Conclusion
Overall, The Long Walk gives a really good look at
how gender, control, and survival connect in a dystopian novel. Even though the
boys are put in a brutal, competitive situation, they still form emotional
bonds and question what it means to “act like a man.” It’s mix of dystopian
themes and complicated ideas about gender would make it a strong and great addition
to this kind of course.
Work Cited
King, Stephen. The Long Walk. Turtleback Books, 1979.
I remember seeing the trailer for this in a movie theater, and immediately wanting to go and see it for myself. This book/movie talks about some very important and relevant topics. It feels like their dystopian society is not too far off from becoming a reality.
ReplyDeleteI have never heard of this novel and will definitely have to check it out, your description has made me want to add it to my reading list! I like how you talk about how masculinity is constructed by the world around these boys but how they sort of break that stereotype by showing deep emotion while on the walk.
ReplyDeleteInterestingly, I remember scrolling on my TikTok feed the other day and saw a video for this. I was drawn to it because of its very interesting concept, and how men were portrayed in this society. For this, I feel like it fits very well into a class like ours. The emotional depth that comes from a story like this sounds like it could generate a lot of meaningful conversation. This sounds like a movie that I'll be adding to my winter watch list!
ReplyDelete