"Noughts and crosses dystopia" Essays and Research Papers

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    Dystopia in Literature

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    Dystopia in Literature Dystopia‚ a society in an oppressed and controlled state‚ is a common theme in world literature. I have chosen texts 1984 by George Orwell‚ One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest by Ken Kesey‚ Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury and the film‚ V for Vendetta‚ directed by James McTeigue. These texts display different types of repressive control systems and some even accurately predict today’s society’s trends. How do the characters react to their dystopian society? In 1984‚ by

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    Feed: Dystopia

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    04/04/2014 Mr. Fama ENG3U Emily Coffey Analytical Paragraphs: Technology & Society Does “Earth” as described in M.T. Anderson’s Feed reflect a dystopian society? Dystopia; a place or state characterized by human misery‚ as squalor‚ oppression‚ disease and overcrowding. Often referred to as an unpleasant‚ totalitarian or environmentally degraded state of living. M.T Anderson’s “Feed” portrayed much of earth’s natural environment as being succumbed to the ecological turmoil caused by

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    The books that have had the greatest impacts on me are Noughts and Crosses by Malorie Blackman (it is a series of books which I have read all) and To kill a Mocking Bird by. These books are influential to me because both books target themes of racial discrimination and love‚ friendship‚ depression‚ prejudice‚ violence‚ and power abuse. Both novels portray a world where it is completely acceptable to discriminate against people because of the colour of their skin. Both novels also have societies which

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    Star Crosses Commentary

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    Alexander Charles‚ what a nice name. I wonder if Mr.Charles was an English teacher? In his poem star-crossed‚ Charles talks about two skeletons discovered in Mantua Italy. These skeletons "linked in a lovers embrace" are the underlying theme throughout the poem. At the the beginning of the poem Charles links love to these 5000 year old lovers while at the end he links them to his age. However he incorporates a sense of bias in the poem. "I shall grow old" age is a something that some

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    Dystopia In Animal Farm

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    classic like Animal Farm. These days dystopias have become so complex and realistic but they still share similar characteristics of dystopias written in the past. A dystopia is a society that is made up of humans suffering and living in oppression. On the other hand‚ a utopia is a society where everything is perfect : government is stable‚ people have rights‚ and there are laws benefiting the common people. The problem is that utopias can become dystopias when corruption occurs. This happens in

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    Do you know what a true utopia is? What’s the difference between a utopia and a dystopia? In Fahrenheit 451‚ Ray Bradbury wrote about how a utopia‚ became a dystopia really fast. There are many different ideas that can be viewed differently and how every society has distinct views. Some ideas like that are the basics that we would not think is viewed differently like family and emotions. First of all family can be viewed in many ways. In Fahrenheit 451 the family´s do not love each other and are

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    Utopia or dystopia?

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    The novel Brave New World‚ by Aldous Huxley‚ portrays a dystopian society that completely limits the citizen’s lifestyle. Like many other dystopian societies‚ it is under the guise of being utopian. The residents are born into a permanent caste system‚ all the citizens are at the absolute mercy of 10 World Controllers‚ and they are conditioned and brainwashed into emotionless cyborgs. The readers are introduced to a strict caste system early on in the novel which outlines the conditioning for each

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    Dystopia essay

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    The essay is 1140 words long and covers the start - first five chapters - of the novel. The Handmaid’s Tale is a dystopic fantasy set in the future of the USA‚ which has been renamed ‘the Republic of Gilead’. Atwood paints a brutal nightmare centred on the status‚ roles and function of women as divided in Gilead‚ into biblical types: ‘Wives’‚ ‘Marthas’ and ‘Handmaids’ or ‘ambulatory wombs’. Individuality is removed‚ like possessions‚ including names. Offred‚ is in the possessive - ‘of’ ‘Fred’

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    Dystopia In 1984

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    1984 If the state or a man has absolute power over his citizens it has always been a mystery what the consequences are going to be. George Orwell shows us one of the dystopian results in his book 1984. He created in his book a world devastated by nuclear war and poverty‚ where the West has fallen under the spell of a totalitarian socialist dictator‚ Big Brother. A political demagogue and religious cult leader all rolled into one‚ Big Brother’s power is so strong that no one may know if he even

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    writes about a community trying to be perfect. The community has many flaws causing them to be a dystopia. According to the passage “utopia and dystopia” ‚ a dystopia is a term used to describe a utopian society in which things have gone wrong. In The Giver‚ the community is dystopia because of sameness‚ lack of knowledge‚ and complete control. The first reason the community in The Giver is a dystopia is because of sameness. Sameness makes everything the same. It talks about not having color‚ “when

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