The main problem the world faces in the movie, Children of Men, is infertility. In the year 2027, no child has been born in the world since 2009. Because of unknown reasons, every female in the entire world has become infertile. Scientist have no idea why this has happened, and have no resolution to fix this worldwide problem. This has become an immense, devastating complication for the world. This has caused a present problem because children bind families and people together. As shown in the movie after the death of Dylan, Julian and Theo’s son, they separated from each other. Families, were no longer a “family” if their child passed away, or they couldn’t have a child. Furthermore, there would be a great loss of jobs for some occupations…
The Giver is a book about a totalitarian government that controls its people by outlawing colors, pets and many things we take for granted today. In the dystopian society of “The Giver”, there are many differences from our modern society, some being the age system, the “family units”, and the economy and employment…
Control is a major theme in the dystopian narrative “Harrison Bergeron”, which is mostly shown through the government and humanity. George (and all of the other intelligent human beings) are mandated to wear handicaps by the government. These consist of a radio in George’s ear that make deafening noises. This stops him from taking unfair advantage of his brain. People are also weighed down with sash weights, bags of birdshot, and junk metal. If they take these objects off they are fined and sent to prison. When Hazel suggests that George take off his weights for a while he objects because his thoughts are that if they don’t follow the rules society will fall back into the Dark Ages however they are already in a dystopian society. Consequently,…
In dystopian novels, it’s very common that society is rather corrupted, restricted, and unfree. Citizens are expected to follow orders without a second thought and behave like everyone else. Nonetheless, these dystopias are treated as if they are perfect and ideal. Why do these troubled societies are appear to be perfect? Is it because they appear to be the best option as other countries are even more corrupted? Are citizens brainwashed into believing that their homeland is as idealistic? Or is it the denial telling these residents that there is nothing fundamentally wrong in paradise? Maybe the reasons are all of the questions previously asked. One thing is for sure – ideal utopias are never what they appear…
Similar does not always mean the same. Like husbands or chocolate many things may start off as similar, but are represented differently. Just like sisters who derive from the same parents, they may look the same and represent the same genetic code but have different characteristics. In like manner, writers use similar techniques but in divergent ways using unique characters to represent similar ideas. Correspondingly, in the short stories Arena by Frederic Brown and Through Thy Bounty by Lucy A. Snyder; both writers use the same elements of Dystopia and manage to emphasize the same aspects of humanity through different characters.…
In the article “The Lost Boys,” the writer documents the journey of three Sudanese brothers. The oldest of the three brothers is Peter Dut, he is 21 and is the caretaker of his younger brothers Maduk (17) and Riak (15). The brothers’ journey begins in the midst of a civil war in Sudan. The boys and thousands of other sudanese people varying between the ages of 8 and 18 are seeking refuge from their home country. They endure a travel of over 1,000 miles on foot facing many troubles like militias, bandits, starvation, and dehydration. Out of the `10,000 boys only around half of them survived and only 3,600 were granted admission to The United States. When the three brothers arrive in the United States they are unaccustomed to American ways and…
An opinion most people share is that of children bringing happiness to your life. “Being a parent is the best thing that’s ever happened to me” they say, but what happens when a couple can’t conceive naturally? In the Novel The Handmaid’s Tale the problem of infertility is presented to us. The wives are unable to have children therefore the handmaid’s are the one’s who conceive. Womens infertility is from primary or secondary factors. The primary factor is for a woman whom has never had children previously and shows functional alterations that provoke infertility. The secondary factor of infertility is that of women who have had children before, but can not achieve getting pregnant again. After the age of 30 the woman becomes less fertile,…
Across the decades, there have been countless examples of broken societies in literature . In these places, life has taken on a new meaning than what we know to be true today. These dystopian future novels are often dark, and there is almost always previous event in that timeline that would lead to reason why the system is set up in that particular way. Family is often a big theme in this type of book. Whether it be because that is what the government demands or reprimands, family is almost always an interesting aspect of futuristic/dystopian novels. However, when societies become too controlling or demanding, or when there is a major conflict that affects a large amount of people, the central theme of a whole, happy, and healthy family…
Infertility, or sterility, is the inability to produce offspring or the inability to conceive. Although the majority of American men and women assume that they will mature, fall in love, and create children of their own, the rate of fertility continues to decrease over the years, and the American dream of becoming a parent does not always become a reality. Although some men and women are complacent with adoption or an egg/sperm donation, others who plan for a child of their own consider infertility as a major devastation. Research has shown that over thirty percent of women in America experience complications with fertility and fourteen percent of all clinically recognized pregnancies in America result in a miscarriage or stillbirth (Schwerdtfeger). However, fertility is not just a concern for females. For centuries, if a couple were unable to have children, the fault was put on the women, although we now know that both men and women suffer equally from fertility complications. Among couples who are infertile, about forty percent of cases are exclusively due to female infertility, forty percent to male infertility and ten percent involving problems with both partners (McArthur). The factor of not being able to produce offspring is a hard concept to endure for both genders, and can result in severe emotional issues that can be sustained for an extended period of time. The effects of being infertile can take a severe toll on one’s relationship with family, friends, and most commonly, their significant other.…
“Every daring attempt to make great change in existing conditions, every lofty vision of new possibilities for the human race, has been labeled Utopian,” In order to have a perfect society, change for the greater good need to be made.Unfortunately, instead of a Utopian society, it becomes a dystopian society. The reason that Utopian societies are bad is because everyone has to be equal for no one is better, and all autonomy is lost.…
Societies that are futuristic in settings are what we call a dystopian society. Dystopia is literary the opposite of what a utopian community will be like. In dystopia, everything is distorted where people are ruled by either a strong-opposed individual through the use of militarism or technologies and also by technology themselves. Citizens of a dystopian community doesn 't hold their own rights and are usually treated inhumanely, creating a fearsome and dark environment.…
Whilst the thousands of men who returned infertile are denied scrutiny, despite declining fertility rates, aiding an ageing generation and contributing a diminutive amount to society.…
The girl scrambled for food through the thick wall of trash, the smell of mildew crossing her nose. She wore a tattered leather jacket and a pair of old jeans with shoes that people once called Chuck Taylors. She cursed when she didn’t find anything and turned back to her brother who was in the shopping cart looking hopefully at her. She sighed, “Nothing.” Her little brother sighs as well and she begins to push him in the cart again, back into the destroyed and broken streets. All around them the buildings had collapsed, they’d been bombed or quaked. Some had merely just deteriorated and broke down by themselves. An old thing made of tons of metal once called a Chevy sat on the side of the road. They went past it without a second glance, and stared through the crunchy and dead grass on what was once a park. Now there were no trees, dark green water that was more than most likely dirt, and the benches were about to break down just like the buildings. A highway bridge not far away next to a McDonalds was broken in he middle, something like a stuntman trick, only the stuntman was dead. The McDonalds sign wasn’t even buzzing today-the batteries had died a good four years ago with the rest of the world. The girl hadn’t tasted a McDonalds burger in what seemed like forever, maybe it was forever. Maybe it wasn’t.…
We are living in an era when not getting pregnant should be easy because we have a lot more contraceptives now then we did in the past. We live in a society where we are educated about sex at an earlier age in school. Also there are a lot more abortion clinics available and numerous birth control methods, ranging from over-the-counter male and female condoms, and spermicides. Other contraceptive options include the day after pill, fertility awareness and…
"Society does not need more children; but it does need more loved children. Quite literally, we cannot afford unloved children - but we pay heavily for them every day. There should not be the slightest communal concern when a woman elects to destroy the life of her thousandth-of-an-ounce embryo. But all society should rise up in alarm when it hears that a baby that is not wanted is about to be born." ~Garrett Hardin…