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Wikipedia

Dystopia

A dystopia (from Ancient Greek δυσ meaning "bad" and τόπος meaning "place"; alternatively cacotopia[2] or anti-utopia) is a speculated community or society that is undesirable or frightening.[3][4] It is often treated as an antonym of utopia, a term that was coined by Sir Thomas More and figures as the title of his best known work, published in 1516, which created a blueprint for an ideal society with minimal crime, violence, and poverty. The relationship between utopia and dystopia is in actuality, not one simple opposition, as many utopian elements and components are found in dystopias as well, and vice versa.[5][6][7]

Life in Kowloon Walled City has often inspired the dystopian identity in modern media works.[1]

Dystopias are often characterized by fear or distress,[3] tyrannical governments, environmental disaster,[4] or other characteristics associated with a cataclysmic decline in society. Themes typical of a dystopian society include: complete control over the people in a society through the usage of propaganda, heavy censoring of information or denial of free thought, worshiping an unattainable goal, the complete loss of individuality, and heavy enforcement of conformity.[8] Despite certain overlaps, dystopian fiction is distinct from post-apocalyptic fiction, and an undesirable society is not necessarily dystopian. Dystopian societies appear in many fictional works and artistic representations, particularly in stories set in the future. Famous examples include George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four (1949), Aldous Huxley's Brave New World (1932), and Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451 (1953). Dystopian societies appear in many sub-genres of fiction and are often used to draw attention to society, environment, politics, economics, religion, psychology, ethics, science, or technology. Some authors use the term to refer to existing societies, many of which are, or have been, totalitarian states or societies in an advanced state of collapse. Dystopias, through an exaggerated worst-case scenario, often make a criticism about a current trend, societal norm, or political system.[9]

Etymology

"Dustopia", the original spelling of "dystopia", first appeared in Lewis Henry Younge's Utopia: or Apollo's Golden Days in 1747.[10] Additionally, dystopia was used as an antonym for utopia by John Stuart Mill in one of his 1868 Parliamentary Speeches (Hansard Commons) by adding the prefix "dys" (Ancient Greek: δυσ- "bad") to "topia", reinterpreting the initial "u" as the prefix "eu" (Ancient Greek: ευ- "good") instead of "ou" (Ancient Greek: οὐ "not").[11][12] It was used to denounce the government's Irish land policy: "It is, perhaps, too complimentary to call them Utopians, they ought rather to be called dys-topians, or caco-topians. What is commonly called Utopian is something too good to be practicable; but what they appear to favour is too bad to be practicable".[13][14][15][16]

Decades before the first documented use of the word "dystopia" was "cacotopia"/"kakotopia" (using Ancient Greek: κακόs, "bad, wicked") originally proposed in 1818 by Jeremy Bentham, "As a match for utopia (or the imagined seat of the best government) suppose a cacotopia (or the imagined seat of the worst government) discovered and described".[17][18] Though dystopia became the more popular term, cacotopia finds occasional use; Anthony Burgess, author of A Clockwork Orange, said it was a better fit for Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four because "it sounds worse than dystopia".[19]

Theory

Some scholars, such as Gregory Claeys and Lyman Tower Sargent, make certain distinctions between typical synonyms of dystopias. For example, Claeys and Sargent define literary dystopias as societies imagined as substantially worse than the society in which the author writes. Some of these are anti-utopias, which criticise attempts to implement various concepts of utopia.[20] In the most comprehensive treatment of the literary and real expressions of the concept, Dystopia: A Natural History, Claeys offers a historical approach to these definitions.[21] Here the tradition is traced from early reactions to the French Revolution. Its commonly anti-collectivist character is stressed, and the addition of other themes—the dangers of science and technology, of social inequality, of corporate dictatorship, of nuclear war—are also traced. A psychological approach is also favored here, with the principle of fear being identified with despotic forms of rule, carried forward from the history of political thought, and group psychology introduced as a means of understanding the relationship between utopia and dystopia. Andrew Norton-Schwartzbard noted that "written many centuries before the concept "dystopia" existed, Dante's Inferno in fact includes most of the typical characteristics associated with this genre – even if placed in a religious framework rather than in the future of the mundane world, as modern dystopias tend to be".[22] In the same vein, Vicente Angeloti remarked that "George Orwell's emblematic phrase, a boot stamping on a human face — forever, would aptly describe the situation of the denizens in Dante's Hell. Conversely, Dante's famous inscription Abandon all hope, ye who enter here would have been equally appropriate if placed at the entrance to Orwell's "Ministry of Love" and its notorious "Room 101".[23]

Society

 
People Leaving the Cities, photo art by Zbigniew Libera, imagines a dystopian future in which people have to leave dying metropolises.

Dystopias typically reflect contemporary sociopolitical realities and extrapolate worst-case scenarios as warnings for necessary social change or caution.[24] Dystopian fictions invariably reflect the concerns and fears of their creators' contemporaneous culture.[25] Due to this, they can be considered a subject of social studies.[citation needed] In dystopias, citizens may live in a dehumanized state, be under constant surveillance, or have a fear of the outside world.[26] In the film What Happened to Monday the protagonists risk their lives by taking turns onto the outside world because of a one-child policy place in this futuristic dystopian society.[citation needed]

In a 1967 study, Frank Kermode suggests that the failure of religious prophecies led to a shift in how society apprehends this ancient mode. Christopher Schmidt notes that, while the world goes to waste for future generations, people distract themselves from disaster by passively watching it as entertainment.[27]

In the 2010s, there was a surge of popular dystopian young adult literature and blockbuster films.[28][27] Some have commented on this trend, saying that "it is easier to imagine the end of the world than it is to imagine the end of capitalism".[29][30][31][32][33] Cultural theorist and critic Mark Fisher identified the phrase as encompassing the theory of capitalist realism ‐ the perceived "widespread sense that not only is capitalism the only viable political and economic system, but also that it is now impossible even to imagine a coherent alternative to it" – and used the above quote as the title to the opening chapter of his book, Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative?. In the book, he also refers to dystopian film such as Children of Men (originally a novel by P. D. James) to illustrate what he describes as the "slow cancellation of the future".[33][34] Theo James, an actor in Divergent (originally a novel by Veronica Roth), explains that "young people in particular have such a fascination with this kind of story [...] It's becoming part of the consciousness. You grow up in a world where it's part of the conversation all the time – the statistics of our planet warming up. The environment is changing. The weather is different. There are things that are very visceral and very obvious, and they make you question the future and how we will survive. It's so much a part of everyday life that young people inevitably – consciously or not – are questioning their futures and how the Earth will be. I certainly do. I wonder what kind of world my children's kids will live in."[28]

The entire substantial sub-genre of alternative history works depicting a world in which Nazi Germany won the Second World War can be considered as dystopias. So can other works of Alternative History, in which a historical turning point led to a manifestly repressive world. For example, the 2004 mockumentary C.S.A.: The Confederate States of America, and Ben Winters' Underground Airlines, in which slavery in the United States continues to the present, with "electronic slave auctions" carried out via the Internet and slaves controlled by electronic devices implanted in their spines, or Keith Roberts Pavane in which 20th Century Britain is ruled by a Catholic theocracy and the Inquisition is actively torturing and burning "heretics".[citation needed]

Common themes

Politics

In When the Sleeper Wakes, H. G. Wells depicted the governing class as hedonistic and shallow.[35] George Orwell contrasted Wells's world to that depicted in Jack London's The Iron Heel, where the dystopian rulers are brutal and dedicated to the point of fanaticism, which Orwell considered more plausible.[36]

The political principles at the root of fictional utopias (or "perfect worlds") are idealistic in principle and result in positive consequences for the inhabitants; the political principles on which fictional dystopias are based, while often based on utopian ideals, result in negative consequences for inhabitants because of at least one fatal flaw.[37][38]

Dystopias are often filled with pessimistic views of the ruling class or a government that is brutal or uncaring, ruling with an "iron fist".[citation needed] Dystopian governments are sometimes ruled by a fascist or communist regime or dictator. These dystopian government establishments often have protagonists or groups that lead a "resistance" to enact change within their society, as is seen in Alan Moore's V for Vendetta.[39]

Dystopian political situations are depicted in novels such as We, Parable of the Sower, Darkness at Noon, Nineteen Eighty-Four, Brave New World, The Handmaid's Tale, The Hunger Games, Divergent and Fahrenheit 451 and such films as Metropolis, Brazil (1985), Battle Royale, FAQ: Frequently Asked Questions, Soylent Green, Logan's Run, and The Running Man (1987).[citation needed]

Economics

The economic structures of dystopian societies in literature and other media have many variations, as the economy often relates directly to the elements that the writer is depicting as the source of the oppression. There are several archetypes that such societies tend to follow. A theme is the dichotomy of planned economies versus free market economies, a conflict which is found in such works as Ayn Rand's Anthem and Henry Kuttner's short story "The Iron Standard". Another example of this is reflected in Norman Jewison's 1975 film Rollerball (1975).[citation needed]

Some dystopias, such as that of Nineteen Eighty-Four, feature black markets with goods that are dangerous and difficult to obtain or the characters may be at the mercy of the state-controlled economy. Kurt Vonnegut's Player Piano depicts a dystopia in which the centrally controlled economic system has indeed made material abundance plentiful but deprived the mass of humanity of meaningful labor; virtually all work is menial, unsatisfying and only a small number of the small group that achieves education is admitted to the elite and its work.[40] In Tanith Lee's Don't Bite the Sun, there is no want of any kind – only unabashed consumption and hedonism, leading the protagonist to begin looking for a deeper meaning to existence.[41] Even in dystopias where the economic system is not the source of the society's flaws, as in Brave New World, the state often controls the economy; a character, reacting with horror to the suggestion of not being part of the social body, cites as a reason that works for everyone else.[42]

Other works feature extensive privatization and corporatism; both consequences of capitalism, where privately owned and unaccountable large corporations have replaced the government in setting policy and making decisions. They manipulate, infiltrate, control, bribe, are contracted by and function as government. This is seen in the novels Jennifer Government and Oryx and Crake and the movies Alien, Avatar, RoboCop, Visioneers, Idiocracy, Soylent Green, WALL-E and Rollerball. Corporate republics are common in the cyberpunk genre, as in Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash and Philip K. Dick's Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? (as well as the film Blade Runner, influenced by and based upon Dick's novel).[citation needed]

Class

Dystopian fiction frequently draws stark contrasts between the privileges of the ruling class and the dreary existence of the working class. In the 1931 novel Brave New World by Aldous Huxley, a class system is prenatally determined with Alphas, Betas, Gammas, Deltas and Epsilons, with the lower classes having reduced brain-function and special conditioning to make them satisfied with their position in life.[43] Outside of this society there also exist several human settlements that exist in the conventional way but which the World Government describes as "savages".[citation needed]

In George Orwell’s novel 1984, the dystopian society described within has a tiered class structure with the ruling elite “Inner Party” at the top, the “Outer Party” below them functioning as a type of middle-class with minor privileges, and the working-class “Proles” (short for proletariat) at the bottom of the hierarchy with few rights, yet making up the vast majority of the population.[citation needed]

In Ypsilon Minus by Herbert W. Franke, people are divided into numerous alphabetically ranked groups.[citation needed]

In the film Elysium, the majority of Earth's population on the surface lives in poverty with little access to health care and are subject to worker exploitation and police brutality, while the wealthy live above the Earth in luxury with access to technologies that cure all diseases, reverse aging, and regenerate body parts.[citation needed]

Written a century earlier, the future society depicted in H.G. Wells' The Time Machine had started in a similar way to Elysium – the workers consigned to living and working in underground tunnels while the wealthy live on a surface made into an enormous beautiful garden. But over a long time period the roles were eventually reversed – the rich degenerated and became a decadent "livestock" regularly caught and eaten by the underground cannibal Morlocks.[citation needed]

Family

Some fictional dystopias, such as Brave New World and Fahrenheit 451, have eradicated the family and kept it from re-establishing itself as a social institution. In Brave New World, where children are reproduced artificially, the concepts of "mother" and "father" are considered obscene. In some novels, such as We, the state is hostile to motherhood, as a pregnant woman from One State is in revolt.[44]

Religion

Religious groups play the role of the oppressed and oppressors. In Brave New World the establishment of the state included lopping off the tops of all crosses (as symbols of Christianity) to make them "T"s, (as symbols of Henry Ford's Model T).[45] Margaret Atwood's novel The Handmaid's Tale takes place in a future United States under a Christian-based theocratic regime.[46] One of the earliest examples of this theme is Robert Hugh Benson's Lord of the World, about a futuristic world where Marxists and Freemasons led by the Antichrist have taken over the world and the only remaining source of dissent is a tiny and persecuted Catholic minority.[47]

Identity

In the Russian novel We by Yevgeny Zamyatin, first published in 1921, people are permitted to live out of public view twice a week for one hour and are only referred to by numbers instead of names. The latter feature also appears in the later, unrelated film THX 1138. In some dystopian works, such as Kurt Vonnegut's Harrison Bergeron, society forces individuals to conform to radical egalitarian social norms that discourage or suppress accomplishment or even competence as forms of inequality.[citation needed]

Violence

Violence is prevalent in many dystopias, often in the form of war, but also in urban crimes led by (predominately teenage) gangs (e.g. A Clockwork Orange), or rampant crime met by blood sports (e.g. Battle Royale, The Running Man, The Hunger Games, Divergent, and The Purge). It is also explained in Suzanne Berne's essay "Ground Zero", where she explains her experience of the aftermath of 11 September 2001.[48]

Nature

Fictional dystopias are commonly urban and frequently isolate their characters from all contact with the natural world.[49] Sometimes they require their characters to avoid nature, as when walks are regarded as dangerously anti-social in Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451, as well as within Bradbury's short story "The Pedestrian".[citation needed] In C. S. Lewis's That Hideous Strength, science coordinated by government is directed toward the control of nature and the elimination of natural human instincts. In Brave New World, the lower class is conditioned to be afraid of nature but also to visit the countryside and consume transport and games to promote economic activity.[50] Lois Lowry's "The Giver" shows a society where technology and the desire to create a utopia has led humanity to enforce climate control on the environment, as well as to eliminate many undomesticated species and to provide psychological and pharmaceutical repellent against human instincts. E. M. Forster's "The Machine Stops" depicts a highly changed global environment which forces people to live underground due to an atmospheric contamination.[51] As Angel Galdon-Rodriguez points out, this sort of isolation caused by external toxic hazard is later used by Hugh Howey in his series of dystopias of the Silo Series.[52]

Excessive pollution that destroys nature is common in many dystopian films, such as The Matrix, RoboCop, WALL-E, April and the Extraordinary World and Soylent Green, as well as in videogames like Half-Life 2. A few "green" fictional dystopias do exist, such as in Michael Carson's short story "The Punishment of Luxury", and Russell Hoban's Riddley Walker. The latter is set in the aftermath of nuclear war, "a post-nuclear holocaust Kent, where technology has reduced to the level of the Iron Age".[53][citation needed]

Science and technology

Contrary to the technologically utopian claims, which view technology as a beneficial addition to all aspects of humanity, technological dystopia concerns itself with and focuses largely (but not always) on the negative effects caused by new technology.[54]

Typical dystopian claims

1. Technologies reflect and encourage the worst aspects of human nature.[54] Jaron Lanier, a digital pioneer, has become a technological dystopian: "I think it’s a way of interpreting technology in which people forgot taking responsibility."[citation needed]

“'Oh, it’s the computer that did it, not me.' 'There’s no more middle class? Oh, it’s not me. The computer did it'" (Lanier). This quote explains that people begin to not only blame the technology for the changes in lifestyle but also believe that technology is an omnipotence. It also points to a technological determinist perspective in terms of reification.[55]

2. Technologies harm our interpersonal communication, relationships, and communities.[56]

  • decrease in communication within family members and friend groups due to increased time in technology use
  • virtual space misleadingly heightens the impact of real presence; people resort to technological medium for communication nowadays

3. Technologies reinforce hierarchies – concentrate knowledge and skills; increase surveillance and erode privacy; widen inequalities of power and wealth; giving up control to machines. Douglas Rushkoff, a technological utopian, states in his article that the professional designers "re-mystified" the computer so it wasn't so readable anymore; users had to depend on the special programs built into the software that was incomprehensible for normal users.[54]

4. New technologies are sometimes regressive (worse than previous technologies).[54]

5. The unforeseen impacts of technology are negative.[54] “ 'The most common way is that there’s some magic artificial intelligence in the sky or in the cloud or something that knows how to translate, and what a wonderful thing that this is available for free. But there’s another way to look at it, which is the technically true way: You gather a ton of information from real live translators who have translated phrases… It’s huge but very much like Facebook, it’s selling people back to themselves… [With translation] you’re producing this result that looks magical but in the meantime, the original translators aren’t paid for their work… You’re actually shrinking the economy.'"[56]

6. More efficiency and choices can harm our quality of life (by causing stress, destroying jobs, making us more materialistic).[57] In his article "Prest-o! Change-o!,” technological dystopian James Gleick mentions the remote control being the classic example of technology that does not solve the problem "it is meant to solve". Gleick quotes Edward Tenner, a historian of technology, that the ability and ease of switching channels by the remote control serves to increase distraction for the viewer. Then it is only expected that people will become more dissatisfied with the channel they are watching.[57]

7. New technologies can solve problems of old technologies or just create new problems.[54] The remote control example explains this claim as well, for the increase in laziness and dissatisfaction levels was clearly not a problem in times without the remote control. He also takes social psychologist Robert Levine's example of Indonesians "'whose main entertainment consists of watching the same few plays and dances, month after month, year after year,’ and with Nepalese Sherpas who eat the same meals of potatoes and tea through their entire lives. The Indonesians and Sherpas are perfectly satisfied". Because of the invention of the remote control, it merely created more problems.[57]

8. Technologies destroy nature (harming human health and the environment). The need for business replaced community and the "story online" replaced people as the "soul of the Net". Because information was now able to be bought and sold, there was not as much communication taking place.[54]

See also

References

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    "An imaginary place or condition in which everything is as bad as possible; opp. UTOPIA (cf. CACOTOPIA). So dystopian n., one who advocates or describes a dystopia; dystopian a., of or pertaining to a dystopia; dystopianism, dystopian quality or characteristics."

    The example of first usage given in the OED (1989 ed.) refers to the 1868 speech by John Stuart Mill quoted above. Other examples given in the OED include:

    1952 Negley & Patrick Quest for Utopia xvii. 298 The Mundus Alter et Idem [of Joseph Hall] is...the opposite of eutopia, the ideal society: it is a dystopia, if it is permissible to coin a word. 1962 C. WALSH From Utopia to Nightmare 11 The 'dystopia' or 'inverted utopia'. Ibid. 12 Stories...that seemed in their dystopian way to be saying something important. Ibid. ii. 27 A strand of utopianism or dystopianism. 1967 Listener 5 Jan. 22 The modern classics Aldous Huxley's Brave New World and George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty Four are dystopias. They describe not a world we should like to live in, but one we must be sure to avoid. 1968 New Scientist 11 July 96/3 It is a pleasant change to read some hope for our future is trevor ingram ... I fear that our real future is more likely to be dystopian.

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See also Gregory Claeys. "When Does Utopianism Produce Dystopia?" in: Zsolt Czigányik, ed.

Utopian Horizons. Utopia and Ideology - The Interaction of Political and Utopian Thought (Budapest: CEU Press, 2016), pp. 41–61.

External links

dystopia, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scho. For other uses see Dystopia disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Dystopia news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message A dystopia from Ancient Greek dys meaning bad and topos meaning place alternatively cacotopia 2 or anti utopia is a speculated community or society that is undesirable or frightening 3 4 It is often treated as an antonym of utopia a term that was coined by Sir Thomas More and figures as the title of his best known work published in 1516 which created a blueprint for an ideal society with minimal crime violence and poverty The relationship between utopia and dystopia is in actuality not one simple opposition as many utopian elements and components are found in dystopias as well and vice versa 5 6 7 Life in Kowloon Walled City has often inspired the dystopian identity in modern media works 1 Dystopias are often characterized by fear or distress 3 tyrannical governments environmental disaster 4 or other characteristics associated with a cataclysmic decline in society Themes typical of a dystopian society include complete control over the people in a society through the usage of propaganda heavy censoring of information or denial of free thought worshiping an unattainable goal the complete loss of individuality and heavy enforcement of conformity 8 Despite certain overlaps dystopian fiction is distinct from post apocalyptic fiction and an undesirable society is not necessarily dystopian Dystopian societies appear in many fictional works and artistic representations particularly in stories set in the future Famous examples include George Orwell s Nineteen Eighty Four 1949 Aldous Huxley s Brave New World 1932 and Ray Bradbury s Fahrenheit 451 1953 Dystopian societies appear in many sub genres of fiction and are often used to draw attention to society environment politics economics religion psychology ethics science or technology Some authors use the term to refer to existing societies many of which are or have been totalitarian states or societies in an advanced state of collapse Dystopias through an exaggerated worst case scenario often make a criticism about a current trend societal norm or political system 9 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Theory 3 Society 4 Common themes 4 1 Politics 4 2 Economics 4 2 1 Class 4 3 Family 4 4 Religion 4 5 Identity 4 6 Violence 4 7 Nature 4 8 Science and technology 4 8 1 Typical dystopian claims 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksEtymology Edit Dustopia the original spelling of dystopia first appeared in Lewis Henry Younge s Utopia or Apollo s Golden Days in 1747 10 Additionally dystopia was used as an antonym for utopia by John Stuart Mill in one of his 1868 Parliamentary Speeches Hansard Commons by adding the prefix dys Ancient Greek dys bad to topia reinterpreting the initial u as the prefix eu Ancient Greek ey good instead of ou Ancient Greek oὐ not 11 12 It was used to denounce the government s Irish land policy It is perhaps too complimentary to call them Utopians they ought rather to be called dys topians or caco topians What is commonly called Utopian is something too good to be practicable but what they appear to favour is too bad to be practicable 13 14 15 16 Decades before the first documented use of the word dystopia was cacotopia kakotopia using Ancient Greek kakos bad wicked originally proposed in 1818 by Jeremy Bentham As a match for utopia or the imagined seat of the best government suppose a cacotopia or the imagined seat of the worst government discovered and described 17 18 Though dystopia became the more popular term cacotopia finds occasional use Anthony Burgess author of A Clockwork Orange said it was a better fit for Orwell s Nineteen Eighty Four because it sounds worse than dystopia 19 Theory EditSome scholars such as Gregory Claeys and Lyman Tower Sargent make certain distinctions between typical synonyms of dystopias For example Claeys and Sargent define literary dystopias as societies imagined as substantially worse than the society in which the author writes Some of these are anti utopias which criticise attempts to implement various concepts of utopia 20 In the most comprehensive treatment of the literary and real expressions of the concept Dystopia A Natural History Claeys offers a historical approach to these definitions 21 Here the tradition is traced from early reactions to the French Revolution Its commonly anti collectivist character is stressed and the addition of other themes the dangers of science and technology of social inequality of corporate dictatorship of nuclear war are also traced A psychological approach is also favored here with the principle of fear being identified with despotic forms of rule carried forward from the history of political thought and group psychology introduced as a means of understanding the relationship between utopia and dystopia Andrew Norton Schwartzbard noted that written many centuries before the concept dystopia existed Dante s Inferno in fact includes most of the typical characteristics associated with this genre even if placed in a religious framework rather than in the future of the mundane world as modern dystopias tend to be 22 In the same vein Vicente Angeloti remarked that George Orwell s emblematic phrase a boot stamping on a human face forever would aptly describe the situation of the denizens in Dante s Hell Conversely Dante s famous inscription Abandon all hope ye who enter here would have been equally appropriate if placed at the entrance to Orwell s Ministry of Love and its notorious Room 101 23 Society EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it March 2017 See also Apocalyptic and post apocalyptic fiction In society People Leaving the Cities photo art by Zbigniew Libera imagines a dystopian future in which people have to leave dying metropolises Dystopias typically reflect contemporary sociopolitical realities and extrapolate worst case scenarios as warnings for necessary social change or caution 24 Dystopian fictions invariably reflect the concerns and fears of their creators contemporaneous culture 25 Due to this they can be considered a subject of social studies citation needed In dystopias citizens may live in a dehumanized state be under constant surveillance or have a fear of the outside world 26 In the film What Happened to Monday the protagonists risk their lives by taking turns onto the outside world because of a one child policy place in this futuristic dystopian society citation needed In a 1967 study Frank Kermode suggests that the failure of religious prophecies led to a shift in how society apprehends this ancient mode Christopher Schmidt notes that while the world goes to waste for future generations people distract themselves from disaster by passively watching it as entertainment 27 In the 2010s there was a surge of popular dystopian young adult literature and blockbuster films 28 27 Some have commented on this trend saying that it is easier to imagine the end of the world than it is to imagine the end of capitalism 29 30 31 32 33 Cultural theorist and critic Mark Fisher identified the phrase as encompassing the theory of capitalist realism the perceived widespread sense that not only is capitalism the only viable political and economic system but also that it is now impossible even to imagine a coherent alternative to it and used the above quote as the title to the opening chapter of his book Capitalist Realism Is There No Alternative In the book he also refers to dystopian film such as Children of Men originally a novel by P D James to illustrate what he describes as the slow cancellation of the future 33 34 Theo James an actor in Divergent originally a novel by Veronica Roth explains that young people in particular have such a fascination with this kind of story It s becoming part of the consciousness You grow up in a world where it s part of the conversation all the time the statistics of our planet warming up The environment is changing The weather is different There are things that are very visceral and very obvious and they make you question the future and how we will survive It s so much a part of everyday life that young people inevitably consciously or not are questioning their futures and how the Earth will be I certainly do I wonder what kind of world my children s kids will live in 28 The entire substantial sub genre of alternative history works depicting a world in which Nazi Germany won the Second World War can be considered as dystopias So can other works of Alternative History in which a historical turning point led to a manifestly repressive world For example the 2004 mockumentary C S A The Confederate States of America and Ben Winters Underground Airlines in which slavery in the United States continues to the present with electronic slave auctions carried out via the Internet and slaves controlled by electronic devices implanted in their spines or Keith Roberts Pavane in which 20th Century Britain is ruled by a Catholic theocracy and the Inquisition is actively torturing and burning heretics citation needed Common themes EditPolitics Edit In When the Sleeper Wakes H G Wells depicted the governing class as hedonistic and shallow 35 George Orwell contrasted Wells s world to that depicted in Jack London s The Iron Heel where the dystopian rulers are brutal and dedicated to the point of fanaticism which Orwell considered more plausible 36 The political principles at the root of fictional utopias or perfect worlds are idealistic in principle and result in positive consequences for the inhabitants the political principles on which fictional dystopias are based while often based on utopian ideals result in negative consequences for inhabitants because of at least one fatal flaw 37 38 Dystopias are often filled with pessimistic views of the ruling class or a government that is brutal or uncaring ruling with an iron fist citation needed Dystopian governments are sometimes ruled by a fascist or communist regime or dictator These dystopian government establishments often have protagonists or groups that lead a resistance to enact change within their society as is seen in Alan Moore s V for Vendetta 39 Dystopian political situations are depicted in novels such as We Parable of the Sower Darkness at Noon Nineteen Eighty Four Brave New World The Handmaid s Tale The Hunger Games Divergent and Fahrenheit 451 and such films as Metropolis Brazil 1985 Battle Royale FAQ Frequently Asked Questions Soylent Green Logan s Run and The Running Man 1987 citation needed Economics Edit The economic structures of dystopian societies in literature and other media have many variations as the economy often relates directly to the elements that the writer is depicting as the source of the oppression There are several archetypes that such societies tend to follow A theme is the dichotomy of planned economies versus free market economies a conflict which is found in such works as Ayn Rand s Anthem and Henry Kuttner s short story The Iron Standard Another example of this is reflected in Norman Jewison s 1975 film Rollerball 1975 citation needed Some dystopias such as that of Nineteen Eighty Four feature black markets with goods that are dangerous and difficult to obtain or the characters may be at the mercy of the state controlled economy Kurt Vonnegut s Player Piano depicts a dystopia in which the centrally controlled economic system has indeed made material abundance plentiful but deprived the mass of humanity of meaningful labor virtually all work is menial unsatisfying and only a small number of the small group that achieves education is admitted to the elite and its work 40 In Tanith Lee s Don t Bite the Sun there is no want of any kind only unabashed consumption and hedonism leading the protagonist to begin looking for a deeper meaning to existence 41 Even in dystopias where the economic system is not the source of the society s flaws as in Brave New World the state often controls the economy a character reacting with horror to the suggestion of not being part of the social body cites as a reason that works for everyone else 42 Other works feature extensive privatization and corporatism both consequences of capitalism where privately owned and unaccountable large corporations have replaced the government in setting policy and making decisions They manipulate infiltrate control bribe are contracted by and function as government This is seen in the novels Jennifer Government and Oryx and Crake and the movies Alien Avatar RoboCop Visioneers Idiocracy Soylent Green WALL E and Rollerball Corporate republics are common in the cyberpunk genre as in Neal Stephenson s Snow Crash and Philip K Dick s Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep as well as the film Blade Runner influenced by and based upon Dick s novel citation needed Class Edit Dystopian fiction frequently draws stark contrasts between the privileges of the ruling class and the dreary existence of the working class In the 1931 novel Brave New World by Aldous Huxley a class system is prenatally determined with Alphas Betas Gammas Deltas and Epsilons with the lower classes having reduced brain function and special conditioning to make them satisfied with their position in life 43 Outside of this society there also exist several human settlements that exist in the conventional way but which the World Government describes as savages citation needed In George Orwell s novel 1984 the dystopian society described within has a tiered class structure with the ruling elite Inner Party at the top the Outer Party below them functioning as a type of middle class with minor privileges and the working class Proles short for proletariat at the bottom of the hierarchy with few rights yet making up the vast majority of the population citation needed In Ypsilon Minus by Herbert W Franke people are divided into numerous alphabetically ranked groups citation needed In the film Elysium the majority of Earth s population on the surface lives in poverty with little access to health care and are subject to worker exploitation and police brutality while the wealthy live above the Earth in luxury with access to technologies that cure all diseases reverse aging and regenerate body parts citation needed Written a century earlier the future society depicted in H G Wells The Time Machine had started in a similar way to Elysium the workers consigned to living and working in underground tunnels while the wealthy live on a surface made into an enormous beautiful garden But over a long time period the roles were eventually reversed the rich degenerated and became a decadent livestock regularly caught and eaten by the underground cannibal Morlocks citation needed Family Edit Some fictional dystopias such as Brave New World and Fahrenheit 451 have eradicated the family and kept it from re establishing itself as a social institution In Brave New World where children are reproduced artificially the concepts of mother and father are considered obscene In some novels such as We the state is hostile to motherhood as a pregnant woman from One State is in revolt 44 Religion Edit Religious groups play the role of the oppressed and oppressors In Brave New World the establishment of the state included lopping off the tops of all crosses as symbols of Christianity to make them T s as symbols of Henry Ford s Model T 45 Margaret Atwood s novel The Handmaid s Tale takes place in a future United States under a Christian based theocratic regime 46 One of the earliest examples of this theme is Robert Hugh Benson s Lord of the World about a futuristic world where Marxists and Freemasons led by the Antichrist have taken over the world and the only remaining source of dissent is a tiny and persecuted Catholic minority 47 Identity Edit In the Russian novel We by Yevgeny Zamyatin first published in 1921 people are permitted to live out of public view twice a week for one hour and are only referred to by numbers instead of names The latter feature also appears in the later unrelated film THX 1138 In some dystopian works such as Kurt Vonnegut s Harrison Bergeron society forces individuals to conform to radical egalitarian social norms that discourage or suppress accomplishment or even competence as forms of inequality citation needed Violence Edit Violence is prevalent in many dystopias often in the form of war but also in urban crimes led by predominately teenage gangs e g A Clockwork Orange or rampant crime met by blood sports e g Battle Royale The Running Man The Hunger Games Divergent and The Purge It is also explained in Suzanne Berne s essay Ground Zero where she explains her experience of the aftermath of 11 September 2001 48 Nature Edit Fictional dystopias are commonly urban and frequently isolate their characters from all contact with the natural world 49 Sometimes they require their characters to avoid nature as when walks are regarded as dangerously anti social in Ray Bradbury s Fahrenheit 451 as well as within Bradbury s short story The Pedestrian citation needed In C S Lewis s That Hideous Strength science coordinated by government is directed toward the control of nature and the elimination of natural human instincts In Brave New World the lower class is conditioned to be afraid of nature but also to visit the countryside and consume transport and games to promote economic activity 50 Lois Lowry s The Giver shows a society where technology and the desire to create a utopia has led humanity to enforce climate control on the environment as well as to eliminate many undomesticated species and to provide psychological and pharmaceutical repellent against human instincts E M Forster s The Machine Stops depicts a highly changed global environment which forces people to live underground due to an atmospheric contamination 51 As Angel Galdon Rodriguez points out this sort of isolation caused by external toxic hazard is later used by Hugh Howey in his series of dystopias of the Silo Series 52 Excessive pollution that destroys nature is common in many dystopian films such as The Matrix RoboCop WALL E April and the Extraordinary World and Soylent Green as well as in videogames like Half Life 2 A few green fictional dystopias do exist such as in Michael Carson s short story The Punishment of Luxury and Russell Hoban s Riddley Walker The latter is set in the aftermath of nuclear war a post nuclear holocaust Kent where technology has reduced to the level of the Iron Age 53 citation needed Science and technology Edit Contrary to the technologically utopian claims which view technology as a beneficial addition to all aspects of humanity technological dystopia concerns itself with and focuses largely but not always on the negative effects caused by new technology 54 Typical dystopian claims Edit 1 Technologies reflect and encourage the worst aspects of human nature 54 Jaron Lanier a digital pioneer has become a technological dystopian I think it s a way of interpreting technology in which people forgot taking responsibility citation needed Oh it s the computer that did it not me There s no more middle class Oh it s not me The computer did it Lanier This quote explains that people begin to not only blame the technology for the changes in lifestyle but also believe that technology is an omnipotence It also points to a technological determinist perspective in terms of reification 55 2 Technologies harm our interpersonal communication relationships and communities 56 decrease in communication within family members and friend groups due to increased time in technology use virtual space misleadingly heightens the impact of real presence people resort to technological medium for communication nowadays3 Technologies reinforce hierarchies concentrate knowledge and skills increase surveillance and erode privacy widen inequalities of power and wealth giving up control to machines Douglas Rushkoff a technological utopian states in his article that the professional designers re mystified the computer so it wasn t so readable anymore users had to depend on the special programs built into the software that was incomprehensible for normal users 54 4 New technologies are sometimes regressive worse than previous technologies 54 5 The unforeseen impacts of technology are negative 54 The most common way is that there s some magic artificial intelligence in the sky or in the cloud or something that knows how to translate and what a wonderful thing that this is available for free But there s another way to look at it which is the technically true way You gather a ton of information from real live translators who have translated phrases It s huge but very much like Facebook it s selling people back to themselves With translation you re producing this result that looks magical but in the meantime the original translators aren t paid for their work You re actually shrinking the economy 56 6 More efficiency and choices can harm our quality of life by causing stress destroying jobs making us more materialistic 57 In his article Prest o Change o technological dystopian James Gleick mentions the remote control being the classic example of technology that does not solve the problem it is meant to solve Gleick quotes Edward Tenner a historian of technology that the ability and ease of switching channels by the remote control serves to increase distraction for the viewer Then it is only expected that people will become more dissatisfied with the channel they are watching 57 7 New technologies can solve problems of old technologies or just create new problems 54 The remote control example explains this claim as well for the increase in laziness and dissatisfaction levels was clearly not a problem in times without the remote control He also takes social psychologist Robert Levine s example of Indonesians whose main entertainment consists of watching the same few plays and dances month after month year after year and with Nepalese Sherpas who eat the same meals of potatoes and tea through their entire lives The Indonesians and Sherpas are perfectly satisfied Because of the invention of the remote control it merely created more problems 57 8 Technologies destroy nature harming human health and the environment The need for business replaced community and the story online replaced people as the soul of the Net Because information was now able to be bought and sold there was not as much communication taking place 54 See also EditAlternate history Totalitarianism North Korea Horror fiction Apocalyptic and post apocalyptic fiction Biopunk Cyberpunk Digital dystopia Dissident Inner emigration Kafkaesque List of dystopian comics List of dystopian films List of dystopian literature List of dystopian works Lovecraftian horror Plutocracy Police state Self fulfilling prophecy Social science fiction Societal collapse Soft science fiction Utopian and dystopian fictionReferences Edit Girard Greg 1993 City of Darkness Life in Kowloon Walled City ISBN 9781873200131 Rusen Jorn Rusen Jorn Fehr Michael Rieger Thomas 2005 Thinking Utopia Steps Into Other Worlds Berghahn Books ISBN 978 1 57181 440 1 a b Definition of dystopia Merriam Webster Merriam Webster Inc 2012 a b Definition of dystopia Oxford Dictionaries Oxford University Press 2012 Archived from the original on 14 May 2013 Dystopia Examples and Definition of Dystopia as a Literary Device Literary Devices 6 July 2021 Retrieved 1 October 2021 Utopia vs Dystopia PDF Okanogan School District The Fine Line between Utopia and Dystopia The Prolongation of Work sites williams edu Retrieved 1 October 2021 Dystopias amp Utopias Dystopias Miami Dade College Learning Resources Read Write Think 2006 Dystopias Definition and Characteristics PDF Read Write Think Archived PDF from the original on 23 September 2010 Younge Lewis Henry 1747 Utopia Or Apollo s Golden Days George Faulkner Tisdall Nigel 4 November 2016 Postcard from Belgium the birthplace of utopia Financial Times Retrieved 28 August 2018 Mill John Stuart 1988 Public and parliamentary speeches Part I November 1850 November 1868 Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 0 415 03791 3 Retrieved 16 February 2015 Passagen Online sedan 1995 Jamfor forsakringar lan och elavtal Passagen Retrieved 29 December 2022 Dystopia Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required According to the Oxford English Dictionary a dystopia is An imaginary place or condition in which everything is as bad as possible opp UTOPIA cf CACOTOPIA So dystopian n one who advocates or describes a dystopia dystopian a of or pertaining to a dystopia dystopianism dystopian quality or characteristics The example of first usage given in the OED 1989 ed refers to the 1868 speech by John Stuart Mill quoted above Other examples given in the OED include 1952 Negley amp Patrick Quest for Utopia xvii 298 The Mundus Alter et Idem of Joseph Hall is the opposite of eutopia the ideal society it is a dystopia if it is permissible to coin a word 1962 C WALSH From Utopia to Nightmare 11 The dystopia or inverted utopia Ibid 12 Stories that seemed in their dystopian way to be saying something important Ibid ii 27 A strand of utopianism or dystopianism 1967 Listener 5 Jan 22 The modern classics Aldous Huxley s Brave New World and George Orwell s Nineteen Eighty Four are dystopias They describe not a world we should like to live in but one we must be sure to avoid 1968 New Scientist 11 July 96 3 It is a pleasant change to read some hope for our future is trevor ingram I fear that our real future is more likely to be dystopian Adjourned Debate Hansard 12 March 1868 Hansard millbanksystems com Retrieved 8 June 2014 Rusen Jorn Rusen Jorn Fehr Michael Rieger Thomas 2005 Thinking Utopia Steps Into Other Worlds Berghahn Books ISBN 978 1 57181 440 1 Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon ka kos www perseus tufts edu Retrieved 29 December 2022 Bentham Jeremy 1818 Plan of Parliamentary Reform in the form of a catechism Beaumont Matthew 2006 Cacotopianism the Paris Commune and England s Anti Communist Imaginary 1870 1900 ELH 73 2 465 487 doi 10 1353 elh 2006 0012 ISSN 1080 6547 S2CID 162348064 Claeys Gregory Sargent Lyman Tower 1999 The Utopia Reader ISBN 9780814715710 Claeys Gregory 2016 Dystopia A Natural History Oxford University Press ISBN 9780191088612 Dr Andrew C Norton Schwartzbard Foretastes of Modernity in Renaissance Literature and Art in Catherine Summers ed Papers Presented to The Fourth Inter University Symposium on Late Medieval Culture p 59 p 71 note Vicente Angeloti Leggere Dante con gli occhi del tardo Novecento Trimestrale Letterario di Firenze Estate 1987 pp 38 56 Dystopian stories used to reflect our anxieties Now they reflect our reality The Guardian 26 October 2015 Retrieved 3 March 2017 Dystopia facts information pictures www encyclopedia com Retrieved 3 March 2017 Read Write Think Dystopias Definition and Characteristics PDF Archived PDF from the original on 23 September 2010 a b Why are Dystopian Films on the Rise Again JSTOR Daily 19 November 2014 Retrieved 3 March 2017 a b Why Do We Love Dystopian Stories So Much The Cast of Divergent Explains Time Retrieved 3 March 2017 Baker Stephen McLaughlin Greg 1 January 2015 From Belfast to Bamako Cinema in the Era of Capitalist Realism Ireland and Cinema Palgrave Macmillan UK 107 116 doi 10 1057 9781137496362 10 ISBN 978 1 349 56410 1 Shaviro Steven 2010 Post Cinematic Affect John Hunt Publishing ISBN 9781846944314 Retrieved 3 March 2017 Allen Kieran 24 July 2014 Marx and the Alternative to Capitalism Lulu Press Inc ISBN 9781312382626 Retrieved 3 March 2017 Hassler Forest Dan 2012 Capitalist Superheroes Caped Crusaders in the Neoliberal Age John Hunt Publishing ISBN 9781780991795 Retrieved 3 March 2017 a b Fisher Mark 2009 Capitalist realism is there no alternative Library Genesis Winchester UK Washington D C Zero Books ISBN 978 1 84694 317 1 Fisher Mark 2013 Ghosts Of My Life Writings on Depression Hauntology and Lost Futures Winchester UK Zero Books William Steinhoff Utopia Reconsidered Comments on 1984 153 in Eric S Rabkin Martin H Greenberg and Joseph D Olander eds No Place Else Explorations in Utopian and Dystopian Fiction ISBN 0 8093 1113 5 William Steinhoff Utopia Reconsidered Comments on 1984 147 in Eric S Rabkin Martin H Greenberg and Joseph D Olander eds No Place Else Explorations in Utopian and Dystopian Fiction ISBN 0 8093 1113 5 Definition of Utopia Dictionary com www dictionary com Retrieved 29 December 2022 Mary Ellen Snodgrass Encyclopedia of Utopian Literature ABC Clio Literary Companion Ser Santa Barbara ABC Clio Inc 1995 xii ISBN 0874367573 978 0874367577 Jane Donawerth Genre Blending and the Critical Dystopia in Dark Horizons Science Fiction and the Dystopian Imagination ed Raffaella Baccolini and Tom Moylan New York Routledge 2003 Howard P Segal Vonnegut s Player Piano An Ambiguous Technological Dystopia 163 in Eric S Rabkin Martin H Greenberg and Joseph D Olander eds No Place Else Explorations in Utopian and Dystopian Fiction ISBN 0 8093 1113 5 Lee Tanith Don t Bite the Sun Bantam Books 1999 William Matter On Brave New World 98 in Eric S Rabkin Martin H Greenberg and Joseph D Olander eds No Place Else Explorations in Utopian and Dystopian Fiction ISBN 0 8093 1113 5 William Matter On Brave New World 95 in Eric S Rabkin Martin H Greenberg and Joseph D Olander eds No Place Else Explorations in Utopian and Dystopian Fiction ISBN 0 8093 1113 5 Gorman Beauchamp Zamiatin s We 70 in Eric S Rabkin Martin H Greenberg and Joseph D Olander eds No Place Else Explorations in Utopian and Dystopian Fiction ISBN 0 8093 1113 5 William Matter On Brave New World 94 in Eric S Rabkin Martin H Greenberg and Joseph D Olander eds No Place Else Explorations in Utopian and Dystopian Fiction ISBN 0 8093 1113 5 Margaret Atwood The Handmaid s Tale McClelland and Stewart 1985 ISBN 0 7710 0813 9 Robert Hugh Benson 2011 Lord of the World Saint Augustine s Press Page 3 Berne Suzanne Ground Zero Patterns for College Writing 182 Eric S Rabkin Martin H Greenberg Joseph D Olander eds 1983 Avatism and Utopia 4 No Place Else Explorations in Utopian and Dystopian Fiction ISBN 0 8093 1113 5 Huxley Aldous Brave New World Galdon Rodriguez Angel 2014 Urban and Natural Spaces in Dystopian Literature Depicted as Opposed Scenarios Angulo Recto Revista de estudios sobre la ciudad como espacio plural 6 2 doi 10 5209 rev ANRE 2014 v6 n2 47585 Galdon Rodriguez Angel 19 December 2014 Espacios urbanos y naturales como escenarios opuestos en la literatura distopica Angulo Recto Revista de estudios sobre la ciudad como espacio plural 6 2 85 100 doi 10 5209 rev ANRE 2014 v6 n2 47585 ISSN 1989 4015 Self W 2002 1980 Introduction Riddley Walker By Hoban Russell London Bloomsbury p v a b c d e f g Rushkoff D 2002 Renaissance Now Media Ecology and the New Global Narrative Explorations in Media Ecology 1 1 21 32 Technological Determinism Reification visual memory co uk Retrieved 29 December 2022 a b Magazine Smithsonian Rosenbaum Ron What Turned Jaron Lanier Against the Web Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved 29 December 2022 a b c Heitman B 13 April 2011 The Information A History A Theory A Flood Books Book review The Christian Science Monitor 146 150 See also Gregory Claeys When Does Utopianism Produce Dystopia in Zsolt Cziganyik ed Utopian Horizons Utopia and Ideology The Interaction of Political and Utopian Thought Budapest CEU Press 2016 pp 41 61 External links Edit Look up dystopia in Wiktionary the free dictionary Dystopia Tracker predictions about the future and their realisations in real life Dystopic dystopian fiction and its place in reality Dystopias in The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction Climate Change Dystopia discusses current popularity of the dystopian genre Alexandru Bumbas Penser l anachronisme comme moteur esthetique de la dystopie theatrale quelques considerations sur Bond Barker Gabily et Delbo https preo u bourgogne fr textesetcontextes index php id 3524 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dystopia amp oldid 1151392676, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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