Category: Dystopia

  • Why Is Fahrenheit 451 A Dystopian Novel?

    Fahrenheit 451 is a dystopian novel written by Ray Bradbury. The author proves it is a dystopian novel by using dystopian controls such as bureaucratic control, technological control, and philosophical/religious control. Bureaucratic Control talks about how the society is being controlled by its government. Technological Control talks about how the society is influenced by technology.…

  • The Giver: Utopian Or Not Utopian

    Although the community in The Giver may seem utopian, things are not always what they seem. Lois Lowry, author of many young adult novels, won two Newbery Medals for her books Number the Stars and The Giver. In 2014, The Giver became a film adaptation. The Giver has become a mandatory curriculum book in some…

  • A Clockwork Orange as an Example of Dystopia

    The word utopia comes from Greek and means good-place/no-place. A utopia is an imagined society with perfect qualities. There are no problems in a utopia and all desires are met. The opposite of utopia is dystopia, but dystopias can also be failed utopias. Dystopia basically means not-good-place. It is very scary and undesirable. The prime…

  • Christof’s Utopia and Trumans Dystopia

    Utopia is an illusion. Dystopia is the reality A utopia is a fictional society or state imitating a perfect simulation. The film, The Truman Show, directed by Peter Weir demonstrates how Truman’s definition of perfection contrasts from Christofs perspective. The movie teaches viewers that one man’s Utopia is another mans Dystopia, through the defamiliarizing of…

  • The Peculiarities of World in Dystopian Texts

    Utopianism has slowly made its way into a literary genre by authors comparable to Thomas More. Mores book, Utopia was written to show his disdain about the political corruption that happened in Europe during his life. Comparing the word Utopia to both a good place and no place. Although Thomas More was the father of…

  • Dystopian Themes that Emerge in British Cinema

    Dystopia is a sub-genre that is central to British literary history. It pairs itself with the British cynicism and creates a richly bleak outlook on the future world that British cinema has identified and created some of its most influential films from. It is an unspoken subtext that Britains have this pre-existing psychology, but as…

  • The Dystopian Elements In Representations (Visual, Literary, Cinematic) Of Urbanism, Past And Present

    A futuristic imagined universe in which oppressive societal control and the illusion of a perfect society are maintained through corporate, bureaucratic, technological, moral, or totalitarian control. DYSTOPIA The oxford dictionary defines dystopia as an imagined state or society in which there is great suffering or injustice, typically one that is totalitarian or post- apocalypti. A…

  • The Characteristics of Dystopia in American Literature

    The Evolution of American Literature American literature has been transforming since the early settlers came in to colonize the contemporary New England. Back then, deeply believing American authors were writing works which were about the consequences of witchcraft and Salem rituals. At that point there was a problem with practicing dark magic by witches and…

  • The Parallels of our Society and the Dystopia of the Story Jon

    The story Jon by George Saunders revolves around the main character’s experience in a dystopian world as it is written in first person limited. The main character’s name is Randy, however he insists that people call him Jon, because that was the name that his mother gave him before she supposedly died. Jon lives in…

  • Dystopia: the Definition and Features

    Dystopia To fully understand the notion of dystopia, the term utopia needs to be well comprehended as many attempts to define it are to be found throughout a vast number of works. General public tends to use to word as a synonym for ”non-existing”, which can-not be entirely marked as correct. To interpret the word…