"Dystopian society" Essays and Research Papers

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    On Dystopian Societies

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    On Dystopian Societies A Report on our future world By Jeffrey Clemmons 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

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    Dystopian Societies A dystopian society claims to be perfect in it’s efforts to please the wants and needs of human being‚ but in reality is corrupted in its selfish actions to control society. In the movie “Aeon Flux”‚ Mother Nature is killing off human beings and society is enclosed within walls of a futuristic society. Aeon Flux is a lady who works with other rebels in the city to seek the truth behind the government’s true intentions. This is a dystopian society because although it has resolved

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    effects dystopian fiction could have on the future are people getting more interested in the history and the reason behind dystopian society’s. A dystopian society is a society where nothing is perfect. It’s a place where no one wants to be or live. Dystopian fiction started by authors starting to question that societies should be trying to perfect by writing about a bad society‚ a dystopian society. People could start to get more involved in wanting to write about the horrible societies. Effects

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    perspective that ‘the most shocking aspect of the dystopian novel or film is the realisation that the future is contingent on the present‚ and can be affected by something we do or don’t do now’ (Diane Johnson‚ 2014)‚ it becomes apparent that the reflection that the dystopian genre presents on the future consequences as a result of our current actions in the modern society is significant and deeply revelatory in nature. My personal reading of dystopian novel Children of Men by P. D. James (1992) which

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    Compare the dystopian societies‚ and the methods used to create them‚ in ‘The Handmaids Tale’ by Margaret Atwood‚ and ‘1984’ by George Orwell (paying particular attention to the representation of gender). The futuristic and oppressive themes that define a dystopian society are in ‘1984’ by George Orwell and ‘The Handmaids Tale’ (THT) by Margaret Atwood. These forms of society feature contrasting types of repressive social control and these stories often explore the concept of humans abusing technology

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    Quick Write #1: Dystopia/Utopia 1.No‚ because a utopian society expects too much from everyone in the society. Plus‚ if someone in the society feels different or wants to rebel against the society’s unity‚ there could be a fracture in the perfection. People are meant to be special and different‚ not forced into sameness and conforming to society. There was a study performed on Brain Games‚ a Television show on National Geographic Channel‚ where there was a line of 10 people long and the first nine

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    For as long as dystopian novels have existed‚ they have gone almost synonymously with grand illusion. The entire novel is spent in a quest to find the truth of the society around them‚ in an effort to tear down the walls of the dysfunctional‚ often tyrannical society that they live in. However‚ they are wrong‚ truth is not what tears down illusion in dystopian societies; truth is the motivation and creator for illusion in dystopian societies. In this paper‚ I will argue against the perception that

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    Mrs. Elliott 4/16/15 Marginalization in dystopian society Dystopian fiction presents the world presents the world two types of characters; protagonists and antagonists. Often‚ dystopian societies portray the main character as a protagonist‚ in which they marginalize the characters thoughts. In a dystopia‚ the society is displayed to be very bad for its citizens because of the strict rules and obligations that they impose. This is shown through the society ’s lack of enthusiasm to create more inventions

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    Dystopian

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    of Dystopian Genre The dystopic novel evinces a strong theme common in much science fiction and fantasy fiction‚ the creation of a future time (usually)‚ when the conditions of human life are exaggeratedly bad due to deprivation‚ oppression or terror. This created society or ‘dystopia’ frequently constructs apocalyptic views of a future using crime‚ immorality or corrupt government to create or sustain the bad quality of people’s lives‚ often conditioning the masses to believe their society is proper

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    To what extent is the idea of dystopian society present in 1984 and Fahrenheit 451 and how does being part of it affect the protagonists? The idea of a dystopian society is that of complete control‚ either through the use of a police state that has ultimate control over humanity and or the idea of man abusing technology to further gain control of its subjects. These ideas are very present in both novels. In 1984‚ the totalitarian state is technically and urbanely engineered to spy on and

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