Title: Dystopian Novels
1Dystopian Novels
2Definition 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.
3Dystopian 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.
4Dystopian 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.
5Examples of Dystopian Novels
- 1984
- Brave New World
- Fahrenheit 451
- A Clockwork Orange
- Animal Farm
- The Time Machine
61984
- 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 heros 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.
7Relation 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
8Relation 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.
9Relation 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
10Brave 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.
11Relation to the Real World
- The issues raised in the book were influenced by
the issues of Huxleys 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.
12Relation 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.
13Relation 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.
141984 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.
15Fahrenheit 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
16Relation 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.
17Relation 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.
18Summary
Goals Methods Used
Theme
everyone equal, thinks the same way force, spying, secret police evils of totalitarianism
no war or poverty, only happiness change what people want sacrificing culture for happiness
absence of things disrup-tive to society book burnings, no personal expression consequences of fast-paced society
1984 Brave New World Fahrenheit 451
19Summary
- 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.