Introduction Paragraph - Motivations drive everything we do. In “The Censors,” Juan writes a letter to a former love, which ends up motivating him to take a job at the Censorship Division in order to get that letter back. The letter is critical to the development of the plot because it is both his reason for taking the job and ends up being the reason he is executed at the end., Body paragraph #1 - We learn at the beginning that the letter is the reason Juan took the job. We read in paragraph 4: “...he applied simply to intercept his own letter, a consoling but unoriginal idea.” His initial plan was to be the censor that has to inspect the letter, and he would allow the letter to go through., Body Paragraph #2 - It took a long time, but the letter did eventually arrive in his hands. It ends up being the reason he is executed because he turns himself in for writing it. In the last paragraph we learn: “He was about to congratulate himself for having finally discovered his true mission, when his letter to Mariana reached his hands. Naturally, he censored it without regret.” Juan began to take so much pride in doing his job perfectly that when it even came to his own life, he turned himself in rather than to shirk his responsibilities in his job. The letter brought about the destruction., Conclusion - In conclusion, without the letter, there would be no reason for him to take the job and no reason he would get in trouble for it. The letter was an important plot element. For Juan, it represented the best job he ever did and also his demise.,

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