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Dystopian Novels

Dystopian Novels. Definition Check: Utopian. Utopian refers to human efforts to create a hypothetically perfect society. It refers to good but impossible proposals - or at least ones that are difficult to carry out. Dystopian versus Utopian.

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Dystopian Novels

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  1. Dystopian Novels

  2. Definition Check: Utopian • Utopian refers to human efforts to create a hypothetically perfect society. • It refers to good but impossible proposals - or at least ones that are difficult to carry out.

  3. Dystopian versus Utopian • Dystopian is the opposite of utopian; it is often a utopia gone sour, an imaginary place or state where everything is as bad as it could possibly be.

  4. Dystopian Novels • Dystopian novels usually include elements of contemporary society and are seen as a warning against some modern trend. • Writers use them as cautionary tales, in which humankind is put into a society that may look inviting on the surface but in reality, is a nightmare.

  5. Examples of Dystopian Novels • 1984 • Brave New World • Fahrenheit 451 • A Clockwork Orange • Animal Farm • The Time Machine

  6. 1984 • 1984 by George Orwell (1948) • The setting is the future world of 1984, where the head of government is the all-knowing Big Brother. • The hero’s longing for truth and decency leads him to secretly rebel against the government. • He is arrested by the “Thought Police” who torture the hero to “reeducate him” and force him to love the Big Brother.

  7. Relation to the Real World • 1984 serves as a cautionary tale against totalitarianism • Totalitarianism - A centralized government that does not tolerate parties of differing opinion and that exercises dictatorial control over many aspects of life

  8. Relation to the Real World • The regime in the book could represent a futuristic England or United States, since Orwell was worried about their increasing power during his lifetime.

  9. Relation to the Real World • There are direct parallels between the book and the society at that time: • Leader worship – similar to Big Brother, dictators Joseph Stalin and Adolf Hitler were revered and followed absolutely • Joycamps - a reference to Jewish concentration camps • Thought police – a reference to the Gestapo, the secret police of the Nazis • The Use of Propaganda – similar tactics were used in the totalitarian regimes of Hitler and Stalin

  10. Brave New World • Brave New World by Aldous Huxley (1932) • At first, the world it describes sounds like a utopia: humanity is carefree, healthy, and technologically advanced. • Warfare and poverty have been eliminated, and everyone is permanently happy. • However, all of these things have been achieved by eliminating family, cultural diversity, art, literature, science, religion, and philosophy.

  11. Relation to the Real World • The issues raised in the book were influenced by the issues of Huxley’s time. • The Industrial Revolution had brought massive changes to the world. • Mass production made cars, telephones, and radios cheap and widely available. • The effects of World War I and totalitarian regimes were still being felt. • Huxley used his book to express the fear of losing individual identity in the fast-paced world of the future.

  12. Relation to the Real World • One event that influenced Huxley was an early trip to America. • Huxley was outraged by the commercial-led cheeriness and selfish nature of many of the people. • There was a strong fear in Europe of worldwide Americanization.

  13. Relation to the Real World • Therefore, in Brave New World, Huxley explores the fears of both Soviet communism and American capitalism. • Worse, he suggests that the price of universal happiness will be the sacrifice of everything important in our culture: motherhood, home, family, community, and love.

  14. 1984 versus Brave New World • The major difference between the two books is in 1984 people are controlled by constant government surveillance, secret police, and torture. • In Brave New World humans are controlled by technological interventions that start before birth and last until death, and actually change what people want.

  15. Fahrenheit 451 • Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury (1953) • The story takes place in the twenty-first century, in an America where books are banned. • Society feels that “opinion” books contain conflicting theories which are disruptive to society. • The penalty for owning one is having one's house and books burnt by "firemen." • 451° F is stated as “the temperature at which book paper catches fire and burns…”

  16. Relation to the Real World • In the novel, Bradbury combined several issues of his contemporary society: • The burnings of books in Nazi Germany. • Stalin's suppression of authors and books in the Soviet Union. • The explosion of a nuclear weapon. • "I meant all kinds of tyrannies anywhere in the world at any time, right, left, or middle," Bradbury has said.

  17. Relation to the Real World • The author also addresses the concern that the presence of fast cars, loud music, and advertisements creates a lifestyle with too much stimulation where no one has the time to concentrate. • He also addresses concerns about censorship at the expense of personal expression.

  18. Summary Goals Methods Used Theme 1984 Brave New World Fahrenheit 451

  19. Summary • The dystopian literature of the period reflected the many concerns that resonated throughout the twentieth century. • The concept of a dystopia was introduced to help reveal the potential consequences of a utopia turning against itself.

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