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Cormac Mccarthy's 'No Country For Old Men'

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he New Kind and its Culture
''No Country for Old Men'' (2005), writer by Cormac McCarthy is a police story set on the border between Mexico and the United States. It is the story of Llewelyn Moss, a veteran of the Vietnam War that finds, in the scene of a bloody massacre in the desert, a briefcase with several million dollars and decides to keep them. Soon, a mysterious assassin, Anton Chigurh, and veteran sheriff Tom Bell, along with drug traffickers and other criminals in a violent and savage persecution will be behind him . As in almost all the work of McCarthy, the issue here is the line between good and evil, and the natural tendency of man toward this last. The pure evil is represented by Chigurh, a ruthless murderer who warns Moss that …show more content…
And, many monstrous favorite video games, inviting them to have fun killing in cold blood, brutally gunning their contenders, having cyber sex, etc. It seems that, without realizing, the children are training to enjoy all sorts of outrages perpetrated. The real and virtue violence, not only morally deformed our children but, more seriously, dehumanizes both death and human suffering. In ''No Country for Old Men'' we can see how Chigurh kills his victims in cold blood, without feeling any remorse,'' he had been plannin to kill somebody for about as long as he could remember'' (p.3). When children witness or participate pretending to be violent, their chances of exercising the same forms of aggression with those around them are duplicated. Indeed, it has been seen that being often exposed or starring as players a variety of gruesome crimes, children are desensitized to the suffering of others and lose the ability to take pity on them, so they are able to attack them violently almost without realizing the seriousness of what they do. I have no doubt that the moral agony brought by the culture of immorality and violence in which the new generations are growing is the main responsible for the brutality among our

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