Over the course of the semester, you’ve defined the factors that combine to create a dystopian/utopian society; you’ve described what happens to people and groups in various societies under certain pressures and conditions; you’ve compared/contrasted real matters of public and proposed policy as an exercise in civil engagement; and you’ve presented your thoughts on conformity and individuality in order to better understand your relationship to the world around you and the society in which you live. Now, you have one final opportunity to think critically and reflect deeply on these ideas in order to tie all the threads from our activities together and compose an argument that is comprehensive, compelling, and insightful. For your final paper, you must take a stance in answering the following question: -What problems are avoided when people conform? -What new problems does conformity create? -When is it best to conform to the wishes or rules of others? -How important is it for people to have choices? Realize that in societies (and )—on either extreme end of the spectrum—the individual, to some extent, disappears. For some of you, this disappearance lends itself to a utopic vision; for others, a dystopic vision. Review your writing activities and the points you raised in your previous papers, and see what you would like to incorporate into your final paper. See if there are some ideas you’d like to return to or expand upon as you collect your thoughts. Tell me how something in the novel illustrates or helps support your perspective. This source be reliable/credible, but it can be scholarly or popular. We will discuss in class what makes a source credible and how to determine whether it is scholarly or popular. Your paper makes an argument appropriate to the topic aboveYou quote from your novel and use ideas from the text to support your argumentYou incorporate ideas from at least one additional reliable sourceAny quotes you use are Your paper is in correct MLA format, TNR 12-point font, 1” margins, Works CitedYour Works Cited includes a minimum of two sources (novel and a secondary source)You expand upon at least one idea from a prior assignmentYour writing is clear, concise, and cohesiveYour paper is organized in a way that is easy to followThere are few distracting errors in grammar/mechanics **YOUR PROPOSAL BY ME BEFORE YOU ARE CLEAR TO START WRITING. ** -Set up a compare/contrast between societies—the book’s society vs. the society you know in America or another society (ex. North Korean, Chinese, Russian, French, Swedish, Icelandic, etc.) and discuss the -Use example/illustration—ex. Take a historical approach to American society and look at how it might have progressed or changed to a more/less individualistic society and how that has or has not benefitted it for the better-Look at the psychology of individualism and group dynamics and the positive/negative that can have; look at individual/group privilege…