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Dead Poets Society
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Welton Academy's Rigid Discipline

Welton Academy goes beyond a setting to become the great systemic pressure itself that causes individuals to lose their souls. This conservative elite prep school, which prioritizes Ivy League admission rates above all, forces only a single goal of 'success' upon students and labels individual dreams and free thought as 'deviance.' The film sharply critiques how Welton's strict discipline and expectations suppress the students' selves and ultimately bring about a tragic result.

The Prison Called Success: Welton Academy's Structural Pressure

Welton Academy is not simply decorated with the label of an elite prep school — it is the perfect blueprint for 'success' as dreamed by American society, embodied as a great system. This place holds four values as absolute: Tradition, Honor, Discipline, and Excellence. Students are treated as beings who move toward a single goal — Ivy League admission — and nothing else.

This environment creates the fundamental backdrop that reduces students from 'their own persons' to 'tools for realizing parental desire.' The film critically shows how such an educational system suppresses individual diversity and dreams. Students are conditioned to believe it is natural to receive an education directed solely at getting into a top university. This pressure operates through the logic of dismissing students' spontaneous passion or artistic sensibility as 'wasted time' or 'deviance.'

The Symbol of Suppression: Textbook and Discipline

The shocking teaching method John Keating unveiled from the outset was an act of destroying this symbol of suppression. Keating boldly tears out the introduction page of the textbook — the one with the formula for measuring poetry — encouraging students to listen to the voice of their own souls rather than uniform discipline. This symbolically shows how powerful the school's control over students truly is.

Keating's teaching goes beyond merely teaching poetry to throw students the message 'seize the day (Carpe Diem)' — awakening the voice of their suppressed souls. In the Dead Poets Society's secret space, students liberate their buried emotions and discover what they truly love — theater, reciting poetry. This process was a healing time for students to rediscover the value of their own existence.

The System's Counterattack: Violence in the Name of 'Responsibility'

But the cry of free spirits always collides with enormous walls. Welton Academy's conservative order designates the students' enthusiastic activities as a 'crisis' and tries to transfer responsibility to the most vulnerable party. This systemic violence appears most starkly in the form of 'confession documents.'

After Neil Perry's tragic death, the school and parents had to deflect responsibility for suicide onto someone. Students like the opportunistic Richard Cameron demand, following the logic of the system, that Keating bears responsibility. The principal gathers students together, pressuring them to reveal who placed the 'undesirable advertisement,' and ultimately forces them to sign a confession document asserting that Keating is responsible for everything. This scene reveals the most cruel aspect of a system that uses individual guilt and fear to suppress the truth.

Free Will, and the Final Tribute

In the end the students make their final choice to preserve their free will. Charlie Dalton refuses to capitulate to the principal's coercion and chooses expulsion, becoming a symbol of resistance. And after Keating has left, in the classroom where Principal Nolan is teaching 'the understanding of poetry,' Todd Anderson stands on his desk. Todd calls out "O Captain! My Captain!" — transcending a mere farewell to the teacher to become the most powerful mise-en-scène showing that the students have grasped 'free will' — a choice not made through the inertia of others' compulsion, but by their own volition. Welton Academy's discipline crumbles before the moving tribute of this final moment.

Why It Matters

Welton Academy's strict discipline is the device that visualizes the film's core themes of 'finding oneself' and 'the conflict with social expectation.' This school is not merely a setting — it is the 'hostile environment' itself that suppresses the students' dreams and passion. Through this system the film indicts how the great social pressure of 'success' commodifies individual lives and dismisses dreams as 'inefficient wasted time.' Every action Keating takes is an act of cracking this Welton prison, and the students' final resistance is an artistic triumph that exposes the system's irrationality.

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Dead Poets Society

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