"Utopia" Essays and Research Papers

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    “In the beginning there were three. Three completely different people‚ with completely different ideologies on how to obtain a utopian society. They were known as the three P’s: Peace‚ Power‚ and Pain. Peace believed that through love and kindness‚ a utopian society could exist. Power believed that only through a ruling hand‚ and strict government a utopian society would be successful. Finally‚ Pain believed that only through hardships and suffering could one understand another‚ and with this bond

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    Dystopian Life Have you ever wondered what living in a dystopian society is like? Anthem and “Harrison Bergeron” both take place in a society built off equality. Everyone is expected to be the same as the next person. Rand’s Anthem and Vonnegut’s “Harrison Bergeron” are different in technology but similar in equality. Anthem and ‘Harrison Bergeron” are different when it comes to technology. In Anthem technology is non existent. “It is dark in here‚ the flame of the candle stands still in the air”

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    State under a Machiavellian Ruler vs. Utopian State By Donald Collett A Machiavellian society is ruled by a princedom in which peasants worked most of the occupations. Nobles did not perform any physical labor. And the military is strong and follows the prince. In a Utopian society there is a community of senior phylarchs who discuss state issues. Everyone spends time in the farmlands for two year periods. The Utopians despise war and at all costs do not get involved in war. In Machiavellian

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    Brave New World As man has progressed over time there has been one thing strived for more than anything else. That has been to arrive at a utopian society‚ where everyone is happy‚ disease is nonexistent‚ and conflict‚ anger‚ or sadness are unheard of. In a utopian society only happiness exists. While reading Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World‚ I came to realize that this is not what humans really want. In fact‚ utopian societies are much worse of than the societies of today

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    Dystopian Themes In dystopian novels‚ it is often seen that the way of living is not favorable and many common themes occur throughout different dystopian novels and some not so typical dystopian novels. Dystopia is defined as an imaginary place where the conditions of life are extremely bad and unpleasant. Although One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest is not a typical dystopian novel‚ it shares similar themes as the dystopian novel 1984 such as‚ lack of privacy‚ total control‚ and instilling

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    Gattaca Comparison

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    George Orwell’s Nineteen-Eighty Four and Andrew Niccol’s Gattaca share similar visions of the future. Nineteen eighty four is a science-fiction novel written by Orwell in 1949 and illustrates the perception of the impending future as to what he anticipated‚ similarly the 1997 science-fiction film Gattaca is director Niccol’s apparition of the future. The texts of Nineteen-eighty four and Gattaca contrast due to their different setting and situations. The composers display their values

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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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    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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    The Giver By Lois Lowry

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    Most of us think that a perfect society would be great. But there are always some flaws to a utopian society. For example‚ in Lois Lowry’s novel The Giver‚ people think Release is just sending the people to a new place (freeing)‚ but really‚ they are being killed. I know because‚ “He killed it! My father killed it!” (188). In a modern day society‚ people can just die without having Release. Release is done to prevent sadness‚ but the people are oblivious to what they are doing. In modern day society

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    Dystopian‚ as defined by Merriam-Webster‚ is an imaginary place where people lead dehumanized and often fearful life. Though these stories normally take place in the future‚ often warnings are inserted to parallel the possible consequences that can arise if such actions come to pass. Written in 1953‚ Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury foreshadows an undesirable future brought upon by humanity itself. Media corruption is a key issue seen in the novel that has become a common issue in our world today.

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