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A Comparison of Dystopian Nightmares and Utopian Dreams: Two Paths in Science Fiction Literature That Both Lead to Humanity’s Loss of Empathy

Alisha Grace Scott
- Vol. 1, Iss: 3
TLDR
For instance, this article pointed out that whether a fictional world is allowed to go too far into utopian dreams through drug use, hyper-sexualization and the like, or whether it is all repressed into a dark authoritarian regime, members of each societal type undergo a loss of empathy which eventually becomes the downfall of civilization.
Abstract
Science fiction literature has long dreamed of extravagant utopias and dreaded nightmarish dystopias. Authors from the birth of the genre to more current times find the erosion of empathy to be the downfall of either extreme form of society. On the one hand, George Orwell’s tyrannical climate of Nineteen Eighty-Four (1961) may seem worlds away from the hedonistic faux-paradise of Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World (1932) or the fallen society of Margaret Atwood’s attempted-utopia turned dystopia in Oryx and Crake (2004). However, whether a fictional world is allowed to go too far into utopian dreams through drug use, hyper-sexualization and the like, or whether it is all repressed into a dark authoritarian regime, members of each societal type undergo a loss of empathy which eventually becomes the downfall of civilization. It is notable as well that in both novels where science progresses rapidly without the check of ethics, and in literature where androids or modified human beings become too advanced for mankind to keep in the confines of a lawful society, it is the lack of empathy that causes death, destruction, and/or social disconnection and psychopathy. Though the pleasurable aspects of utopian classics and the unpleasant facets of dystopian books appear at first to be polar opposites, they indeed both reflect a society that is losing its sense of empathy and which is collapsing.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A handmaid's tale.

Brendan McMahon
- 23 Nov 2005 - 
TL;DR: Margaret Atwood's novel “The Handmaid’s Tale” is a tour de force based on speculative dystopian fiction, and Handmaids are recruited to repopulate the sterility struck society.
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アンドロイドは電気羊の夢を見るか? : Do androids dream of electric sheep?

TL;DR: A TURTLE WHICH EXPLORER CAPTAIN COOK GAVE TO THE KING OF TONGA IN 1777 DIED YESTERDAY. It was NEARLY 200 YEARS OLD as mentioned in this paper.
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The player-piano

Sydney Grew
- 01 Jul 1925 - 
References
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Book

A Whole New Mind: Why Right Brainers will Rule the Future

TL;DR: The future belongs to artists, inventors, storytellers, creative and holistic "right-brain" thinkers whose I will help readers sharpen the world and abroad on research from last year as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

A handmaid's tale.

Brendan McMahon
- 23 Nov 2005 - 
TL;DR: Margaret Atwood's novel “The Handmaid’s Tale” is a tour de force based on speculative dystopian fiction, and Handmaids are recruited to repopulate the sterility struck society.
Book

A Brave New World

TL;DR: It is argued that now, at the beginning of the 21st century, this separation is detrimental to the discipline, and changes are proposed that would reunite the two strands.
Book

アンドロイドは電気羊の夢を見るか? : Do androids dream of electric sheep?

TL;DR: A TURTLE WHICH EXPLORER CAPTAIN COOK GAVE TO THE KING OF TONGA IN 1777 DIED YESTERDAY. It was NEARLY 200 YEARS OLD as mentioned in this paper.