Dystopian novels

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    have captivated Young Adult Literature in the past couple of years. While dystopian books have been seen throughout literature for almost a century now, with books like 1984 and Brave New World, only recently have the books made a stride into Young Adult Literature, and end up dominating the genre. Though the question remains: how has or why has dystopian fiction captivated young adults? Experts have come to believe that dystopian narratives, such as the popular Hunger Games, and Divergent,…

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    As society advances, more laws are enforced. In Lois Lowry's novel, The Giver, they have created a futuristic society under an Utopia/Dystopia theme. Literary experts explain that the Greek meaning for Utopia means “no place”, this shows that the Greeks thought that Utopia couldn’t be real or possible. Lois’s experience with her father's aging and dementia allowed her to establish a setting of an Utopia/Dystopian society in her novel. For example, Dystopia/Utopia shows how homes and dwellings…

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    your own thoughts. Imagine living in a world in which all the great thinkers of the past have been blurred from existence. A world without books and not being part of the literary adventures is a world without meaning and truth. Ray Bradbury’s dystopian novel Fahrenheit 451 takes place in a futuristic world where books are illegal to read and keep, and if a citizen is caught with one, it’s burned. In this society, all works of literature have become a symbol of unnecessary controversy and are…

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    dystopia is that it lets us vicariously experience future worlds - but we still have the power to change our own” (Condie). The post-apocalyptic, totalitarian nation of Panem in The Hunger Games, by Suzanne Collins, is one such future world. This novel follows the story of a girl named Katniss Everdeen. Katniss is a female tribute for the Hunger Games, which is an annual death-match between twenty-four tributes. This brutal fight is televised as a reality show and requires viewing from every…

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    It is typically a society that is limited to certain resources. In a dystopia, a society is usually controlled by the government and leaves no power to the people. Two examples of dystopias would be the novel Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury and Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins. Both of these novels are based on dystopias, during different time periods. They have an abundance of components in common, while there are also a few notable differences, each society has its own advantage, and the…

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    Dystopian texts are often depicted by representations of real life problems such as dehumanisation as a result of technological advancement and governmental control. Although composed 20 years apart, both Fritz Lang’s futuristic dystopian silent film Metropolis and George Orwell’s prose fiction novel 1984 present simular prophetic warnings about the dystopian future of humanity. Both texts are a response to their own contextual concerns, as they respond to the vindictiveness and brutality that…

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    1984 Dystopian

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    Dystopian, and utopian worlds are often regarded and portrayed as worlds that display different aspects of societal potential. In the two novels, George Orwell 1984 and Aldous Huxley, Brave New World, people are controlled by a totalitarian government in which they are not free to express individual will and thought. In Orwell’s 1984, the world is assumed to be dystopian and every action an individual takes is observed by Big Brother. In Huxley’s Brave New World, a utopian setting takes place…

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    What's Perfect? Think about some of your favorite movies. Are any of these set in the future or even in an alternate dimension? Modern movies and literature are usually dystopian because they give viewers a way to see that our world could be so much worse. In contrast, utopian novels may often give readers a false hope that one day our society could look the same. A utopian society could not exist in our world because nothing can be perfect, not every person has the same idea of the word…

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    Unwind

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    Unwind Unwind written by Neal Shusterman and published in 2007, has 335 pages and is a Biopunk, Utopian and dystopian fiction. Unwind is the first book in the four book series including Unwholly, Unsouled, and Undivided also a mini book that goes along with the series Unstrung. Connor is an independent, hasty sixteen year old. His tendency to act without intuition gives him a rough appeal additionally gets him into a considerable amount of trouble. His parents have decided to have him unwound.…

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    Bergeron” by Kurt Vonnegut. Jr. taking place in a modern age where everyone is equal mentally and physically and “Anthem” by Ayn Rand took place in a future where society had fallen and everyone is part of a matched set. Both stories taking place in a dystopian society where individualism is a crime and Conformity is law. In a society controlled by handicaps and conformities, the two stories are completely different. In Harrison Bergeron, those who are above average intelligence or…

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