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[edit] Clarification on introductionCan someone clarify this sentence please - "As in George Orwell's 1984 and Aldous Huxley's Brave New World, a dystopia does not pretend to be good, while an anti-utopia appears to be utopian or was intended to be so, but a fatal flaw or other factor has destroyed or twisted the intended utopian world or concept." Are we saying that in 1984 and Brave New World a dystopia is presented which "doesn't pretend to be good"? If we are I think that's incorrect, the two books have different plots. In 1984, the society is created for the good of an elite few, whilst in Brave New World there is a genuine attempt to create a utopia which becomes intolerable to an outsider (the savage). The society depicted in 1984 under this definition would be described as a dystopia whilst Brave New World's would be an anti-utopia. Is this what the sentence is intending to say? If so I think it needs to be reworded as it's quite ambiguous, I can only guess at it's meaning because I'm acquainted with the plots of the two novels, if I hadn't read either I would be pretty clueless. blankfrackis 22:14, 25 June 2007 (UTC) [edit] older entrieshas anyone really thought about how much of that discription matches the ethics and moral values of the united states governement?(note the lack of capital lettering)i just wondered if im alone in this Note on "a common view of traditional life, particularly organized religion, as primitive and nonsensical": I do have to wonder if the religion bit is correct -- some works of fiction may work out like that, but I would say that a real dystopian and/or decadent government would actually run their own religion. The national religion would reward hard work and effort on the part of the masses, while telling the people their reward is in "heaven." The "opiate of the masses", as Karl Marx would say. Note on etymology:. Although I have heard a few claim, as this article does, that 'Utopia' is derived from 'eu' and 'topos,' it is far more commonly and logically held that it comes from 'ou' and 'topos,' thus meaning 'no place' rather than 'good place.' Even the Wikipedia article on 'Utopia' acknowledges both derivations. 'No place' is better because of the problem, outlined on this page, of deciding what society is truly ideal. I have only ever read one Utopia which claims straightforwardly to be ideal (Morris's excellent 'News From Nowhere'): most of the older major players (Utopia, New Atlantis, The Coming Race, Erewhon, Looking Backward, lots of Wells) contain societies that are clearly flawed, and would certainly consider themseles 'no places' rather than 'good places.' I would edit it in, but I'd prefer to see if anybody would argue the other way. AJ, who doesn't yet have an account. --I know I'm a nobody, but I read wikipedia voraciously. I just have to agree with this person above me on the point about the description sounding a lot like the U.S. However, it's so close that I kind of wonder if the author had it in mind while writing out the description. If not, well... that's scary. Which is worse: the mind-controlling totalitarianism of Nineteen Eighty-Four, or the brute-force authoritarianism of The Domination? -- GCarty Are cyberpunk novels, specifically Neuromancer, truly set in dystopian societies? I think it's arguable that they are not truly dystopian, but rather simply decadent. Any thoughts? --Dante Alighieri I wouldn't call most of cyberpunk dystopian, either. I also object to the inclusion of Candide, which may be picaresque, but not dystopian. Nor do I consider all of J. G. Ballard's works dystopian. They often describe the end of civilization, or even mankind, but not a repressive society. Interesting - I came here to comment because I didn't consider Ballard's The Wind [That Came?] From Nowhere to be a dystopia at all, but a disaster story. A story within a story describes an attempt to set up a society that will survive the disaster, but I don't see that developed in any distopian way. Perhaps I'll delete that entry. Or there may be a better Ballardian example. Notinasnaid 12:07, 31 Aug 2004 (UTC) I think there should be a section for dystopian plays, music, operas etc. Would they go under "literature"? I came to the page to list OK Computer as an example of dystopian music. — David Remahl 02:21, 29 Sep 2004 (UTC)
Rorschach567 02:21, 29 Sep 2004 (UTC) Regarding J.G. Ballard, his short stories "Billenium" and "Chronopolis" could be considered dystopian. Walkiped 18:55, 4 Oct 2004 (UTC) [edit] CleanupThe sections on traits of dystopias and dystopian fiction horrify me: they badly need to be re-formatted into something more readable. The other sections need expansion and citations. G. C. Hood 22:24, 1 September 2006 (UTC) Can we revise the sections into something a tad more organized? A massive amount of unsorted bullets is very confusing and intimidating to say the least.Monkus2k 05:58, 20 November 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Dystopia in art vs. social criticismIt seems like Wayland's recent edit to the first paragraph (inserting, "In Post-Modern social critism the same term is used to describe our current post-industrial civilization with its wide divide between rich and poor and serious environmental problems") is out of place in the Dystopia article, as the rest of the article focuses on dystopia in art (literature, film, music). It also smacks of POV. Does the sentence belong in the article? And if so, can it be improved upon? - Walkiped 18:55, 11 Nov 2004 (UTC) I added More's Utopia and Plato's Republic to this list, because both are in fact descriptions of totalitarian states with eugenics programs, and oppressed minorities and women. Another editor reverted my comments, saying 'they are not recognized as being dystopias.' That does not change the fact that they describe nightmare societies.Pookleblinky 14:38, 30 Nov 2004 (UTC) The problem is, it does not matter whether YOU find the societies nightmarish or attractive, it's what the WRITER intends them to demonstrate. Both Plato and More intended the societies in their respctive works to be Utopias, not Dystopias, so it is nonsensical to put them under a dystopia header, even if to modern eyes both societies are repulsive. --Martin Wisse 15:01, 30 Nov 2004 (UTC)
By your standards, ancient Athens would be dystopic - the women hardly left the house. But at the time it probably seemed more utopic, being the first true democracy. What counts as a dystopia to us wouldn't have at the time. On the other hand, 1984, Fahrenheit 451 and Perdido Street Station would probably be dystopia to almost any civilisation. The 'enlightened' Athenians would have hated the thought of book burning or total authoritarianism. Perhaps thats the sign of a true dystopia - one that in most places and times would be abhorred. If you start putting in things which were not intended as dystopias, you could end up with a much bigger list. If you are going to add them, perhaps you could create a sublist with the qualifier that they weren't intended as dystopias 144.132.251.40 10:33, 9 February 2006 (UTC) [edit] Just a book suggestionErehwon from Samuel Butler is a dystopy too, i think. http://www.hoboes.com/html/FireBlade/Butler/Erewhon/ Greetings, Bram.
No intends to creat a dystopia but paradise or a compromise for the greater good. Therefore they cannot be classed by writers attention. Otherwise the same logic would extend to the intentions of the character within the tale who created the society. The readers own views must come into play.
Hopefully not an idiot here: Dystopias seem (to me) to have been explored much more in earlier Sci-Fi than there are currently. Not that I make the money to buy "real" books anymore ... In Larry Nivens "Known Space" books (not a title, but used to distingush from his other works) his pre-Ringworld ARM (and the layer behind /that/ ...) is ... sinisterly benevolent? lol @ me :) Robert Heinlein's "If This Goes On--" (I think it's called, Google help me! Part of his Future History) a theocracy/dictator ruled an American dystopia; The Prism by Emil Petaja (an old old Ace Double, 1968) was very relevant at the time as social standing was based on skin color; Black and Brown held the menial jobs that were left while Gold ruled . . . Green and Blue were in between. The Prism sticks out as the protagonist was from 'outside' the heirarchy - he was bread (sic) as entertainment for the masses back home. Frank Herbert's Dune where the Merchant's Guild controlled the Spice (and longevity ...) Gordon R. Dickson's Dorsai! while more a military sci-fi fantasy hints intriguingly ... even Zelazny's Amber series which is man-vs-himself is dystopian - the characters can walk (or ride ... or drive, hang glide, fly ...) through "Shadow" to any reality they can - or can not - imagine. The only thing they cann't control is personality. One story I read that I remember neither the title nor the author of dealt with humanity discovering a way to put people in their own dream-come-true/fantasy dimension. It dealt more with the depopoulating effect than anything else. When I reach wa-a-y back to the early-mid '70s there was a sci-fi pulp mag that I got where at puberty you had to choose between immortality ... or creativness ... you could be immortal ... or have youe piccolo playing immortilized .... (demonstates a pitfall in sci-fi - I'm not about to Google piccolo) Sorry for free associating there for a bit :) Dystopiaa is a new a fascinating concept to me! —Preceding unsigned comment added by 72.82.193.21 (talk) 05:42, 9 August 2008 (UTC) [edit] Why books are in and outI think there is a clear problem here: people disagree on what is meant by "dystopia". At one extreme, a dystopia is only a novel describing life under an authoritatian regime, intended to highlight current social trends. At another extreme, a dystopia is anything set in or suggesting an unpleasant future. And Candide doesn't belong in any of them, but that's another story...I think I will remove Candide right now. Since the problem is one of definition, I suggest that this article focus on improving and focussing its definition. Perhaps all examples should be removed while that is going on. Then, given the definition, a rigorous test can be used. Also, I think people really should stop adding every dystopia they can think of. It isn't a "List of dystopias", but should be a list of particularly good examples. I don't know if there is a category "Dystopia"? If there is, that can be used to automatically list all the members of the category, and this article should link to the category. If that doesn't work, how about a separate list in the article of "Distputed dystopias". Notinasnaid 21:14, 16 Dec 2004 (UTC) I have removed Pink Floyd's "Dark Side of the Moon". I didn't remember it as being dystopian, and I've reread the lyrics [1] and see no evidence of this at all. It seems to be about the pressures of everyday life, mortality, madness and individuality. Is this an example of "it's bleak so it must be a dystopia"? I don't know the Wall, but is it really dystopian? Isn't the oppression it records that of contemporary life? I am also suspicious that the The Wall makes no use of the term. But I will leave The Wall for now. Comments? Notinasnaid 12:13, 12 Jan 2005 (UTC) To be considered dystopian fiction, I think a work must feature: A) A condition of life that the author portrays as bad or at least worthy of severe criticism B) A government that creates or sustains this condition of life C) A fictional society, thus One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich or The Jungle would not apply I have not read, seen or listened to every example listed but these current or past examples are ones I consider suspect:
--Rorschach567 19:06, 12 Jan 2005 (UTC) In the absence of any comments, I will remove "The Wall by the British band Pink Floyd and its film adaptation are considered by many to be the epitome of dystopian music." See above Notinasnaid 17:54, 14 Apr 2005 (UTC) [edit] A proposal: remove the lists of books and filmsTo me, the lists seem a problem. It seems that anyone who has read a dystopian novel or seen a dystopian film rushes to add it to the list in this article. Clearly it isn't sustainable to list every work, yet the criteria for inclusion are otherwise likely to be rather arbitrary. (I have tended to remove any item that has no entry of its own, for instance, as it doesn't sound very notable). This also means that the question of whether a work really is dystopian can be reviewed by the people editing the article about that work, rather than the people who edit the dystopia category would might not have seen the work. Given that Wikipedia seems slowly to be going from lists to categories, which are easier to maintain and work well with longer lists, I propose dropping these lists completely, instead only referring to the categories. Of course the most noteworthy examples would be mentioned in the article text anyway. I propose as a first stage removing all entries which are already in a suitable category. After that, discussion can resume here about the remaining entries: whether they need a category, or whether they aren't really notable. Perhaps games and music could also be turned into article sections. Feedback? Notinasnaid 09:59, 17 May 2005 (UTC) Move the lists out of the article, but create separate list articles to hold them. Categories are not a complete replacement for lists: consider, for example, that lists can hold more structured information than merely a link; and lists can also hold links to articles which do not yet exist. -- The Anome 10:06, May 17, 2005 (UTC) [edit] dino-topiaI provisionally deleted an addition to the alternative words for dystopia. The addition was "dino-topia". All I can find on the web is a series of books and movie called Dinotopia (cf http://www.dinotopia.com/). If this is used as a real alternative for Dystopia, it seems obscure. Can anyone provide a reference? Notinasnaid 07:50, 10 Jun 2005 (UTC) new thought: has anyone really thought about how much of that discription matches the ethics and moral values of the united states governement?(note the lack of capital lettering)i just wondered if im alone in this No, I agree with you wholeheartedly, it does remind me of the years of having a state-comdemned enemy, you know, the communists/terrorists/socialists/anarchists ~~paul I recently edited an article on an apocalyptic novel titled 'Children of the Dust' that contained a quote referring to humanity as "dinosaurs in bunkers" i have no idea if this is applicable to your question, but it may be a reference ~~tom [edit] The United States?I would like to discuss why the US is in the "see also" section. It seems to me that this link is blatently politically motivated as it is not really supported directly by the article. Granted, I don't like my nation's government either, but it is hardly dystopian. Then again, to be fair, if someone has a valid reason for why the link is there (that I totally missed), or perhaps we could add a section about real dystopian nations (throughout history, NPOV) then I wouldn't have a problem at all. I just consider it a bit offensive and unfounded, but I wanted to ask before I changed anything.--Jt 14:23, 22 September 2005 (UTC)
[edit] U.S.It is at least arguable that the government of the United States is Dystopian, of course there could be worst but there could always be worst. If we are to use the word Dystopia when speaking of reality, instead of fiction, for the word to have a meaning we must have an example, so if we look at the present and history, we can find a number of system that people feel are not ideal. Today, with media, it is possible to broadcast the good of a country, fictional or not, hiding the rot such as a perfume. I feel it is fair to say that the U.S. government can be considered a Dystopia, or at least, in some aspects. And perhaps, it is heading in the direction of a conspicuous Dystopia. The Dystopia article says: "A dystopian society usually exhibits at least one of the following traits from the following non-exhaustive list." I believe the U.S. follows too many of the traits mentioned. Of course, this word is not one written in stone. An indefinite word such as this is bound to bring uncertainty, and Wikipedia is not about opinions but rather about fact. But since this word does not hold many facts, I think the article could give examples that link reality to the idea of Dystopia.
What that means for this article is that if one wrote "I think that the US is..." that has to be deleted. And if what you write amounts to the same thing, then that has to be deleted too - i.e. if it is a speculation, or something you've noticed, or firmly believe, or even know to be a fact, it doesn't belong. The article should be about what can be verified: in this case, not as a fact, but as something recognised by people who study or write in this area. If you could find a respected source you could certainly write "[name of source] writes in his book, [name of book], that the US is ...". To be fully accepted it would need to be a person writing acadmically about Dystopias rather than just writing about something else who pulled in this thought. It may take a while to find a suitable place in the article for this, but it would probably belong. But please don't try too hard. I don't think it would add much to the article, and it would mean that that one sentence became a focus for debate, deletion, restoration etc; to the detriment of the rest of the article, which as an article about literature has much to commend it but much scope for improvement. By the way, you might say that the rest of the article doesn't quote sources, and you would be right. Very few articles do follow Wikipedia guidelines. But for controversial points, the full letter of the law will get invoked. Notinasnaid 07:47, 29 September 2005 (UTC) Odd that anyone would consider the US a dystopia, when our immigrant population is at a ninety year high (http://www.visalaw.com/00sep3/14sep300.html). It seems that the rest of the world is trying to get into the US, so they must not think we are a dystopia. 70.250.247.9 19:45, 6 February 2006 (UTC) Although I don't think too highly of the US atm, it is no where near a classic dystopia. The best real world example of a dystopia to my mind was Pol Pot's reign in Cambodia. North Korea is a more fitting current day example 144.132.251.40 10:01, 9 February 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Word having meaningIf we are to use the word Dystopia when speaking of reality, instead of fiction, for the word to have a meaning we must have an example... Does the word Utopia have meaning? If not counting a non-evolutionary beginning to the human race in pre-historical times (not the subject here, though), it has never once existed. The word, though, has a definition. Or, if the word is still translated as "no-place," does that mean that Orwellian fiction describes a Utopia just as much as Thomas Mann's work? Food for thought. --Chr.K. 11:41, 21 February 2006 (UTC) added by some idiot: To find verfiable facts bittorrent for the 'openyour eyes dvd'-s 0-10 they contain alot of verifiable facts like that the bush empire funded hitler to start the nsdap; what the skull'nbones society at yale university demands of it's members (like bush clinton,kerry and alot of other former presidents) also found on wikipedia: former cia agents & directors (bush ,cheney other whitehouse staff) the existence of the MKULTRA mindcontrol program is verifiable, on openyour eyes dvd 6'chemtrails' a researcher states that by law number*something* the army is allowed to experiment bio-warfare on unknowing citizens.and DOES. you can video-google for 'Tesla' and find out we dont need wires to our homes for energy. Tesla invented things edison marconi and rontgen recieve credit for, but he was to busy inventing bigga fastabetta more! like wireless transmission of power, until J.P.Morgan figured he couldn't charge money for energy from the sky, so funding stopped and the finished broadcasting-tower dismanteled. 'UNITED STATES' is legally different from 'United States',the declaration of independance publicly known is with only 2 capitals, and says'people by'-the United States, the original declaration in the hidden safe says'people of'-the UNITED STATES, which might imply all citizens to be the property of the cooperation UNITED STATES- referred to on the back of the dollar bill which has 'our cooperation is a succes' in Latin above the pyramid under the all capital 'UNITED STATES'. a conspiracy is where there's NO EVIDENCE, but in the US people simply refuse to recognize and/or acknowledge any evidence. because of that, anything that doesn't reach the big news-networks, isn't concidered true. But MKultra controlls the big TV networks, as do bush's familymembers. so if some gullible person reading this start panicking, they don't break a sweat, nor will 'they' take the trouble of hunting me down.I knew too much when I was a kid.I think for myself, using deduction & (un?)reason-ability. there's lots more and if u see enough it all starts to make sence it all ties together:without the elite also playing a bad guy role, humanity would still be in the middle ages, mankind needs the fear as a motivation to do something against it, but the elite is a quantum leap ahead of both science, crime, and religion controlling all like puppets and leaving obvious mistakes for us to wonder/quarrel about, starting fires that'll statistically happen anyway leading crime that'll happen anyway,all to make us find a way way to wake our ignorant selves and neighbours, so the average humanity may one day (2012?) earn the ability to take charge of their own destiny like god's children maturing, like our shadowy governing bodies have been for thousands of years. really: the utmost evil is such a masochist it simply has to destoy itself, so dont worry. the only real enemies of mankind are ignorance and stupidity. [edit] NPOV tagA tag has been added to the article indicating an NPOV violation, and referring to the talk page. But nothing has been added to the talk page about it. So I suspect the tag should be simply removed, whether or not there is a problem with the article. Perhaps the original editor could add a note about what they see as the problem. I will look into whether the tag should be removed. Notinasnaid 18:25, 27 October 2005 (UTC)
[edit] U.S.A.=Dystopia?I don't think that America in itself is a dystopia yet, though I think it is getting uncomfortably close, what with the USA PARIOT Act (WHAT IS WITH THIS TAG?!?) and repeated statements about a terrorist act in the works, all seem to be for making people afraid. I am currenly working on a novel that I consider a minor dystopia set in the year 2013 right after another terrorist attack, it is the first in a trilogy I plan on calling the Dystopian creation series which would end with rioting and then a 1984-esque USA. Also on this subject: a dystopia is what one believes it to be, right? So even if, say, you consider fahrenheit 451 dystopic others might consider it utopic (I did some analysis of that for an essay for my college class), I also consider any dictatorship dystopic just so you know my view of the issues. Acebrock (no account, still) --4.131.129.171 17:57, 6 December 2005 (UTC)
Well, that's all very well and scary, I'm sure, but Congress can't just wave a magic wand and pass and ammend the Constitution. It's an extremely difficult process, so whatever someone puts forth as a "proposed ammendment" makes no real difference at all.CharlesMartel (talk) 14:22, 28 June 2008 (UTC)CharlesMartel [edit] ImagesThis article badly needs some images. I've put in some book covers, but that's just an initial idea. There might be better ways to liven up the page. But something is needed. I think some rewriting is needed, too. No offence, but it's a bit too much of a long list of characteristics right now. I don't want to kind of go berserk, but I'd be tempted to hack this around a bit if I get some time. Metamagician3000 13:39, 2 April 2006 (UTC)
I don't see how what problem there could be with fair use of the covers of books that are actually discussed - or even of scenes from movies that are actually discussed, if the images chosen relate to the aspects under discussion. Please explain the legal difficulty. Your other point is more a matter of taste, on which reasonable people may differ. Metamagician3000 02:16, 5 April 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Spoiler warningWould anyone object to adding the {{spoiler}} template to the Traits of dystopian fiction section? Some of the bullets give away the endings of novels suchs as Nineteen Eighty Four and Brave New World. --JerryOrr 14:16, 10 April 2006 (UTC)
[edit] DemocracyDemocracy and privatization are not antonyms. The democracy section should not have been removed.Goldfritha 00:42, 7 June 2006 (UTC) [edit] subjective in natureOne man's Dystopia is another man's Utopia and vice versa. 168.166.196.40 19:13, 8 June 2006 (UTC) [edit] Common Traits of Dystopian SocietiesThe Common Traits of Dystopian Societies list could use more sources, preferably at least one reference per trait. They are, after all, supposed to be examples from fiction. Shouldn't be too hard to tell where the example was used. --70.142.40.34 02:33, 5 July 2006 (UTC) Also, there is a contradiction between the last trait listed, and the paragraph that follows.
--70.142.40.34 02:33, 5 July 2006 (UTC) Are you saying that stability is inherently a good thing? So an oppressive system that is nonetheless immune to change is a good thing? I don't think that sounds contradictory, but I could be wrong... --69.193.95.203 09:39, 27 November 2006 (UTC) [edit] Indefinite Types of Dystopian EnviormentsI think a corporate enviorment can be changed into a dystopian enviorment simply by having mean coworkers. That might not follow the rules of a dystopian catagory but it can easily fit into the discourteous characteristic that the modern dystopia is having. I also think that a dystopian enviorment can be when someone or a group of people are being branded but in a bad way. Example: The Island. That's a movie when multiple people are being known by a code. They are being raised only to be killed. If you don't think that is a dystopian setting then I don't know what you think it is.
[edit] "arc" typoThe article contains this sentence: "This narrative arc to a sense of hopelessness in such classic dystopian works as Nineteen Eighty-Four." The word "arc" in that sentence is obviously incorrect. Any ideas as to what it ought to be? Wideangle 23:22, 13 July 2006 (UTC)
"This narrative arc to a sense of hopelessness can be found in such classic dystopian works as Nineteen Eighty-Four." You could probably do better than my example, which is why I haven't put it into the article. dreddnott 02:55, 3 October 2006 (UTC)
[edit] ExamplesAn editor deleted an item on the list of "Common traits of a dystopian society" because it had no examples of the case. Several of the existing items had no examples until I provided them. I do not think this is a valid reason for deletion unless some effort has been made to find an example. Goldfritha 03:29, 5 November 2006 (UTC)
[edit] 1984/Ninteen Eighty-FourThe title of the book is written out in both forms; I don't know which is considerd correct, having never read the book (although now I'm intrested in taking a look), but shouldn't it be consistant through the article? Alanahikarichan 16:54, 14 February 2007 (UTC)
edition, along with most contemporary printings that I've seen, has the title as 1984 --Rtkwe 01:59, 12 November 2007 (UTC) [edit] criticisms and validity: A catagorical inquiryI am wondering if it is really appropriate to give criticisms of dystopias as real possibilities after dystopian literature, especially since there are those who have proposed political policies that many would consider dystopian B.F. Skinner's Beyond Freedom and Dignity, comes emmediately to mind. Criticisms of real dystopias and dystopian proposals perhaps belong with real dystopian proposals, since they do not comment on the merrit of the writings. Comments very appreciated —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Thaddeus Slamp (talk • contribs) 04:33, 28 February 2007 (UTC).Thaddeus Slamp 04:40, 28 February 2007 (UTC) [edit] Removed POV additionsI have removed a couple of recent additions which contain a strong POV. Samples: "However, dystopic regimes such as the Soviet Union, the People's Republic of China and North Korea have survived" [2]; "On the other hand, the dystopian Soviet Union lasted for more than 70 years, the People's Republic of China with many distopian characteristic remains powerful and the certainly dystopian North Korean Government remains in power despite worldwide opprobrium." [3]. It seems to be that this article cannot possibly present as fact that any particular state is dystopian, because there would not be universal agreement on this, any more than on the idea that the modern USA is a dystopia (see #U.S.A.=Dystopia? above). What the article can of course present is a reliable source saying this in a relevant context. However recent edits, not only did not add a source, they changed a single named source (not properly cited, but named), by adding "and others", for which see Wikipedia:Weasel words. Overall it might be time to start removing the bits of this article without citations altogether. Notinasnaid 12:10, 12 March 2007 (UTC)
[edit] RewriteThe section "Common traits of the dystopian society" is ridiculous. Starting with the assertion that "Many dystopias exhibit, in some form, a societal, political, economical or religious trait that can be held as “common” in relation to other texts of dystopian fiction to provide a reader a basis for comparison." which does not make sense, and continuing with "The dystopian society, found in fictional and artistic works, can be described as a utopian society with at least one fatal flaw." when there are many, many, many dystopias that can not be described as utopias with flaws. 1984, for instance, or Anthem. The chief problem is that it treats the traits as if they were common to the works, as opposed to traits that are commonly found in dystopias. I am starting to revise. Goldfritha 00:40, 2 May 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Children of Men?Would Children of Men be an example of a dystopia? —The preceding unsigned comment was added by TheGamerDude (talk • contribs) 22:39, 5 May 2007 (UTC).
Opinions don't matter: references do. Is there a reliable source (e.g. academic journal) saying it is dystopian? If so, we should report it. If not, we should remove it. Editors should not be trying to make these decisions by analysis and discussion, interesting as it is. Notinasnaid 09:36, 6 May 2007 (UTC) [edit] A Clockwork OrangePretty surprised that this isn't in the article (even though Burgess is quoted towards the end). This and 1984 are pretty much the two examples that come to mind in literature / film. -76.166.23.65 14:50, 28 August 2007 (UTC) What do you mean? The influence of an government? Mallerd 15:06, 16 October 2007 (UTC) [edit] Anti-Utopia vs DystopiaOceania in Nineteen Eighty-Four and the OneState in We didn't project a facade of being "good"? Really? In whose interpretation? ~ Switch (✉✍☺☒) 09:44, 21 September 2007 (UTC) [edit] origin of wordThe first known use of the term dystopia appeared in a speech before the British Parliament by Greg Webber and John Stuart Mill[3] in 1868. In that speech, Mill said, "It is, perhaps, too complimentary to call them Utopians, they ought rather to be called dys-topians, or caco-topians. What is commonly called Utopian is something too good to be practicable; but what they appear to favour is too bad to be practicable."[4] His knowledge of Greek suggests that he was referring to a bad place, rather than simply the opposite of Utopia. The Greek prefix "dys" ("δυσ-") signifies "ill", "bad" or "abnormal"; Greek "topos" ("τόπος") meaning "place"; and Greek "ou-" ("ου") meaning "not". Thus, Utopia means "nowhere", and is a pun on "Eutopia" meaning "happy place" - the prefix "eu" means "well," or "good." Man, those last 2 sentences, someone with enough knowledge about English clarify this please? I understood it after reading 2 times, the structure of the sentences is not really logical. Mallerd 15:05, 16 October 2007 (UTC) [edit] DefinitionsI've done a little research into dystopias and, while a number of dystopias do include "oppressive social control," I've yet to run into anything that suggests they have to. For example, Lyman Tower Sargent, in his essay "The Three Faces of Utopianism Revisited," defines a dystopia as "a non-existent society described in considerable detail and normally located in space and time that the author intended a contemporaneous reader to view as considerably worse than the society in which the reader lived" (9). So, for example, Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler is about a lack of social control (crime and capitalism run amok while the government is ineffective) but it is a dystopia nonetheless. Also, an anti-utopia is typically described as a work of fiction intended to demonstrate utopia is impossible or otherwise criticizes utopianism. So, while We by Yevgeny Zamyatin is a dystopia that purports to be a utopia, there is still hope for a better society outside the walls of the city and in the resistence, so it isn't necessarily an anti-utopia. 24.210.251.38 02:59, 24 October 2007 (UTC) [edit] spellingisn't it supposed to be "eutopia"?
[edit] AnarchyThe word anarchy used in first sentences suggests that this concept (anarchy) was somehow defined as "nightmare thing", by the person who released the original concept of "dystopia". However this statement about anarchy from first sentences is subsubjective. The article needs a history showing: who used term - "dystopia" in widely known texts or descriptions, as this word can by formed by different people independently, to describe different situations. Previous part of this discussion has some origins of such history. Anarchy for anarchists can mean "utopia". [edit] Feature Time Again?Personally I believe its a well-written article, with numerous good references to numerous forms of media which depict said dystopian societies. I'm unsure about having 'Fable' as a related link, as not all of these stories have a moral sort of aim. However, all in all, most of the disputes over the content of this come from people who, it appears, have failed to either pick up on the definition of 'dystopia', are thinking too far outside the box ('dystopias in today's world'? Please!) and fail to realise its importance as a literary technique, or have simply ignored anything actually in the article. This is not a nomination, just a suggestion. Melaisis (talk) 18:29, 18 April 2008 (UTC) [edit] Does it have to be a failed utopia?It says, a dystopia does not pretend to be utopian, while an anti-utopia appears to be utopian or was intended to be so, but a fatal flaw or other factor has destroyed or twisted the intended utopian world or concept. What if it doesn't strive to be utopian in the classic sense and doesn't appear to be utopian, but claims to be utopian? In otherwords, a hellwhole that declares itself to be the ideal despite prevelant miserey? -98.221.133.96 (talk) 13:07, 3 July 2008 (UTC) [edit] A list of dystopiasI just removed the following passage from Lower Slobbovia, where it was irrelevant cruft:
But I thought that some of it might have some value elsewhere, so I'm posting it here. There does not seem to be a List of dystopias article. -- Dominus (talk) 16:19, 22 September 2008 (UTC) [edit] Excessive Capitalism?In the section on the politics of a Dystopia it refers to a capitalistic dystopia as using excessive capitalism, while it only uses the term socialism to discribe a socialistic dystopia. Do not all dystopias come from the abuse, or excess of a political (or economic) system, so should not socialism be changed to excessive socialism, or excessive capitalism be changed to just capitalism? --Reflections of Memory (talk) 01:23, 4 January 2009 (UTC) I reacted to the same thing. I also wonder why liberalism isn't mentioned. If "excessive" capitalism can be considered a dystopia (which I think it can), then (neo)liberalism, which might very well be the ideological basis for the "excessive" capitalistic society should also be a candidate for dystopian settings. Alltogether, this stinks of POW. Since it would be kind of ridiculous to talk about "excessive fascism" I would like to sugest that the excessive in front of capitalism simply be dropped and that liberalism be added as a political system (or rather ideology) which can be portrayed as being dystopian. Fredriktomte (talk) 03:54, 14 February 2009 (UTC) [edit] RollerballHouston is "Energy" (Enron) - I can't think of a more appropriate way to capture the dystopian flirtation with hypercapitalism from the 1980s, but it's not mention as one of the dystopian genres (corporate society, where the government does nothing and allows the corporations to call the shots... —Preceding unsigned comment added by 67.171.235.200 (talk • contribs) 06:45, 22 May 2009 [edit] No original research, missing citationsThis article suffers from lack of citations and use of verifiable references throughout; the templates indicate that. The warning against "original research" was placed on this article by (an)other editor(s) some time ago, and it still pertains. There may be plagiarism in this article. Given its current form, it is hard to tell which statements come from which particular sources (cited elsewhere in the article) and which statements are the undocumented opinions of previous editors. The article does not meet the basic requirements of Wikipedia editing policies: please see them as referenced in templates throughout the article and talk page. Editors who contributed material without documenting it need to return to provide their sources in citations. Thank you. --NYScholar (talk) 18:51, 22 May 2009 (UTC) Throughout: In many cases where examples from fictional works are given (by editors of this article), these editors need to provide page references to particular editions of the works and/or to secondary sources giving the examples. --NYScholar (talk) 22:18, 24 May 2009 (UTC) [edit] Citation needed?The statement "Dystopias share the negative characteristic of being undesirable societies" does not seem to me to need a citation because it is axiomatic by the definition of dystopia. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 68.165.133.109 (talk) 15:05, 11 June 2009 (UTC) [edit] Distinctions between utopia, dystopia, and anti-utopiaThis section cites Mary Snodgrass as it's authority to draw these distinctions. I have heard many of what would be called anti-utopias by this description called dystopian. Clicking on Mary Snodgrass wikipedia link, it says just that she is a [prolific] author and lists her books. Being a prolific author doesn't make you a global authority on defining words and I question this distinction and her authority to make it. If this was really true the citation would be citing dictionaries not some favorite author of theirs and I think it should be removed (or cite proper authorities on word definitions) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 82.132.136.198 (talk) 16:22, 6 September 2009 (UTC)
Having now read the concerns here I am on the fence about deleting the Snodgrass, but perhaps the wording just requires tweaking. I do not see how we can use delete the reference unless we know the book referenced does not actually say what it claimed. The distinction does seem valid on its face, even if in everyday speech we do not draw the distinction, right? noncompliant_one (talk) 06:29, 16 November 2009 (UTC) [edit] DubiousThat paragraph suspiciously starts prattling on about Utopia's in an article about Dystopia's. Without a copy of the book to check in I cannot say if it was a mistake, but it looks like "utopia", right before the dubious tag there should be "dystopia". Either the paragraph doesn't belong there and should be removed or "utopia" should be corrected to "dystopia". —Preceding unsigned comment added by 82.132.136.198 (talk) 16:38, 6 September 2009 (UTC) [edit] outopia/dystopiaThe pairing has to be "outopia/topia", since there is no Greek particle to indicate the opposite of the negative. One could perhaps use the symbols from arithmetic: "-topia/+topia". "Dystopia" would be the antithesis of "eutopia" Pamour (talk) 11:29, 14 September 2009 (UTC) [edit] ContradictionOne section says dystopia does not pretend to be utopian, the other does say the opposite.--MathFacts (talk) 12:38, 18 December 2009 (UTC) Categories: Start-Class Philosophy articles | Mid-importance Philosophy articles | Start-Class social and political philosophy articles | Mid-importance social and political philosophy articles | Social and political philosophy task force articles | Start-Class Politics articles | Mid-importance Politics articles | Start-Class Literature articles | Mid-importance Literature articles | Start-Class science fiction articles | Mid-importance science fiction articles | Wikipedia featured article candidates (contested) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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