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  2. Dystopia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dystopia

    Dystopian societies appear in many sub-genres of fiction and are often used to draw attention to society, environment, politics, economics, religion, psychology, ethics, science, or technology. Some authors use the term to refer to existing societies, many of which are, or have been, totalitarian states or societies in an advanced state of ...

  3. Category:Dystopias - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Dystopias

    Dystopias are often characterized by fear or distress, tyrannical governments, environmental disaster, or other characteristics associated with a cataclysmic decline in society. Themes typical of a dystopian society include: complete control over the people in a society through the usage of propaganda, heavy censoring of information or denial ...

  4. Utopian thinking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utopian_thinking

    The antithesis to the concept of utopia is dystopia, representing a society that elicits fear and embodies the worst imaginable conditions. [30] [31] Both utopian and dystopian visions share the commonality of existing solely within the realm of human imagination, diverging significantly from the realities of contemporary society. Utopian ...

  5. 67 Disturbing Posts That Suggest We’re Already Living In A ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/67-disturbing-posts...

    Tyrannical governments, natural disasters, crime, violence, poverty—mix these ingredients and you get a hopeless society where people don't live, they just exist.Sounds like a nightmare, right?

  6. Tom Moylan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_moylan

    The result was a more plausible, because recognisable and dynamic, set of alternative possibilities. 'In resisting the flattening out of utopian writing in modern society,' he concluded, 'the critical utopia has destroyed, preserved, and transformed that writing and marks the first important output of utopian discourse since the 1890s'. [1]

  7. Utopian Studies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utopian_Studies

    Utopian Studies is a peer-reviewed academic journal that publishes articles on utopia and utopianism. The journal is published three times a year by the Penn State University Press on behalf of the Society for Utopian Studies. The Editor is Jennifer Wagner-Lawlor of the Pennsylvania State University, in the United States. [1]

  8. Utopian and dystopian fiction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utopian_and_dystopian_fiction

    A dystopia is a society characterized by a focus on that which is contrary to the author's ethos, such as mass poverty, public mistrust and suspicion, a police state or oppression. [1] Most authors of dystopian fiction explore at least one reason why things are that way, often as an analogy for similar issues in the real world.

  9. Mass surveillance in popular culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_surveillance_in...

    Freedom Wars is a PSVita action role-playing game which set in the dystopian future. Most of the human population were sentenced 1,000,000 years of imprisonment since they were born. They were dwelling inside the enclosed metropolitan cities named "Panopticon". The society were under heavy surveillance by numbers of "Accessory" androids.