Dictionary Definition
dystopia
Noun
1 state in which the condition of life is
extremely bad as from deprivation or oppression or terror [ant:
utopia]
2 a work of fiction describing an imaginary place
where life is extremely bad because of deprivation or oppression or
terror
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From δυστοπία italbrac dystopia “bad place, unlucky place”, from prefix δυσ- “un-, mis-”, with notion of “hard, bad, unlucky”, etc. + τόπος italbrac topos “place, region”, metaph. “occasion, opportunity”.Pronunciation
- a UK /ˈdɪsˌtəʊpɪiə/ /"dIs%t@Upi:@/
Noun
Synonyms
Antonyms
Derived terms
Translations
A vision of a future that is a corrupted utopian
society
- Finnish: dystopia
- German: Dystopie (*), Mätopie (**), Anti-Utopie, Gegenutopie
- Japanese: (, ankokukyō), (disutopia)
State in which the condition of life is
extremely bad
Medical condition
- German: Dystopie
Translations to be checked
(*) The German word Dystopie is mainly used in
the medical field. (**) Is rarely used, instead the terms
Anti-Utopia, Gegenutopie, or negative Utopie are used.
See also
Extensive Definition
A dystopia (from the Greek δυσ- and τόπος,
alternatively, cacotopia, kakotopia, cackotopia, or anti-utopia) is
the vision of a society that is the opposite of utopia. A dystopian society is a
state in which the conditions of life are extremely bad,
characterized by human misery, poverty, oppression, violence,
disease, and/or pollution.
Some academic circles distinguish between
anti-utopia and dystopia. As in George
Orwell's 1984, 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.
Origin of the word
The first known use of the term dystopia appeared
in a speech before the British
Parliament by Greg Webber and John
Stuart Mill 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 favor is too bad to be
practicable." 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."
Common traits of a dystopian society
The only trait common to all dystopias is that they are negative and undesirable societies, but many commonalities are found across dystopian societies. In general, dystopias are seen as visions of "dangerous and alienating future societies," often criticizing current trends in culture. It is a culture where the condition of life is "extremely bad," as from deprivation, oppression, or terror.Counter-utopia
Many dystopias, found in fictional and artistic works, can be described as a utopian society with at least one fatal flaw; whereas a utopian society is founded on the good life, a dystopian society’s dreams of improvement are overshadowed by stimulating fears of the “ugly consequences of present-day behavior”.Society
Most dystopias impose severe social restrictions on the characters' lives.This can take the form of social
stratification, where social class
is strictly defined and enforced, and social
mobility is non-existent (see caste system). For example, the
novel Brave New
Worlds class system is prenatally designated in terms of
Alphas, Betas, Gammas, Deltas, and Epsilons, who lack the very
ability to advance.
Another, often related form of restriction lies
in the requirement of strict conformity among citizens, with a
general assumption that dissent and individuality are bad. In the
novel We by Yevgeny
Zamyatin, people are permitted to live out of public view for
only an hour a day. They are not only referred to by numbers
instead of names, but are neither "citizens" nor "people", but
"numbers." In the lower castes, in Brave New World, single embryos
are "bokanovskified", so that
they produce between eight and ninety-six identical siblings,
making the citizens as uniform as possible.
Some dystopian works emphasize the pressure to
conform in terms of the requirement to not excel. In these works,
the society is ruthlessly egalitarian, in which ability and
accomplishment, or even competence, are suppressed or stigmatized
as forms of inequality, as in Kurt
Vonnegut's Harrison
Bergeron. Similarly, in Ray
Bradbury's Fahrenheit
451, the dystopia represses the intellectuals with particular
force, because most people are willing to accept it, and the
resistance to it consists mostly of intellectuals. Moreover in
Ayn
Rand's Atlas
Shrugged the protagonist Dagny Taggart struggles to keep
Taggart Transcontinental thriving in a world that spurns innovation
and excellence. All of Dagny's opponents cite "equality of
opportunity" and the "public good" as their justifications for
opposing free market capitalism and competition.
Social Groups
In a typical dystopia, there is a total absence of any social group besides the state, as in We, or such social groups being subdivisions of the state, under government control, for example, the Junior Anti-Sex League in 1984.Among social groups, independent religions are
notable by their absence. In Brave New World, the establishment of
the state including lopping off the tops of all crosses (as symbols
of Christianity) to make them "T"s, (as symbols of Henry Ford's
Model T). The state may stage, instead, a personality
cult, with quasi-religious rituals about a central figure,
usually a head of
state or an oligarchy of some sort, such
as Big Brother in 1984, or The Benefactor of We. In explicitly
theocratic dystopias, such as Margaret
Atwood's The
Handmaid's Tale, the religion is the state, and is enforced
with the same vigor as any secular dystopia's rule; it does not
provide social bonds outside the state.
Even more than religion, family is attacked by
dystopian societies. In some societies, it has been completely
eradicated, but clearly at great effort, and continuing efforts are
deployed to keep it down, as in Brave New
World, where children are reproduced artificially, where the
concept of a "mother" or "father" is obscene. In others, the
institution of the family exists but great efforts are deployed to
keep it in service of the state, as in 1984, where children are
organized to spy on their parents. In We, the escape of a pregnant
woman from the United State is a revolt; the hostility of the state
to motherhood is a particularly common trait.
Sexuality
The dystopia often must contain human sexuality in order to prevent its disrupting society.The disruption often springs from the social
bonds that sexual activity foments rather than sexual activity
itself, as when Ayn Rand's
Anthem
features a hero and heroine whose revolt stems from a wish to form
a human connection and express personal love. Therefore, some
dystopias are depicted as containing it through encouraging
promiscuous sexuality and lack of ideals of romantic
love, so that the characters do not impute importance to the
activity. In Brave New World, Lenina
Crowne confesses to having sexual intercourse with only one man
and is encouraged by her friend to be more promiscuous, and in We,
"numbers" (people) are allowed sexual intercourse with any other
number by registering for access.
Alternatively, antisexualism is also
prevalent as a way of social control (the Junior Anti-Sex League in
1984), where the state controls so heavily the lives of its
citizens that sexual activity is often an act of rebellion.
Similarly, in the PC game Half-life 2
the citizens of City 17, a
police
state controlled by an invading alien empire called the
Combine, are incapable of reproducing due to a 'suppression
field' active in the city which prevents the production of certain
proteins essential for breeding; the justification for this
restriction, according to Earth's Administrator, is that sexuality
represents the darker animal instincts which humanity must escape
from.
Dystopias dominated by corporations often exploit
sexuality for commercial benefit.
Nature
The society frequently isolates the characters from all contact with the natural world. Dystopias are commonly urban, and generally avoid nature, as when walks are regarded as dangerously anti-social in Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451.Political
Dystopian politics are often characterized as one or several types of governments and political systems. These systems include, but are not limited to, bureaucracy, socialism, communism, chaos, capitalism, fascism, totalitarianism, dictatorships and other forms of political, social and economical control. These governments often assert great power over the citizens, dramatically depicted in 1984 as the authority to decree that Two + two = five. George Orwell contrasted this to the world of Jack London's The Iron Heel, where the dystopian rulers are brutal and dedicated to the point of fanaticism, which he considered more plausible; Dystopian politics, however, are considered flawed in some way or have negative connotations amongst the inhabitants of the dystopian “world”. Dystopian politics are portrayed as oppressive. Dystopias are often filled with pessimistic views of the ruling class or government that is brutal or uncaring ruling with an “iron hand” or “iron fist.” These dystopian government establishments often have protagonists or groups that lead a “resistance” to enact change within their government.Examples of dystopian politics in literary
fiction can be read in
Parable of the Sower, 1984,
and V for
Vendetta. Dystopian politics are portrayed in films such as
Fahrenheit 451, Brazil and
THX
1138.
In some dystopian societies, such as that of
Anthony Burgess' A
Clockwork Orange there is little government control and the
people themselves cause chaos: in the videogame Bioshock, based on
Objectivist principles, the antagonist Andrew Ryan built an
underwater city where "the artist would not fear the censor...
where the great would not be constrained by the small", ie. a
capitalist utopia. Science, technology, and business were all
essentially powered by competition. When Frank Fontaine, a mobster
turned businessman, begins to overturn Ryan Industries' domination
of the "free" market, however, Ryan panics and begins to use more
heavy-handed methods of control, leading to civil war.
Economic
The economic structures of dystopian societies in literature and other media have many variations, as the economy often relates directly to the elements that the writer is depicting as the source of the oppression. However, there are several archetypes that such societies tend to follow.A commonly occurring theme is that the state is
in control of the economy, as shown in such works as Ayn Rand's
Anthem and Henry
Kuttner's short story The Iron Standard. Some dystopias, such
as 1984, feature black
markets with goods that are dangerous and difficult to obtain,
or the characters may be totally at the mercy of the
state-controlled economy. Such systems usually have a lack of
efficiency, as seen in stories like Philip
Jose Farmer's
Riders of the Purple Wage, featuring a bloated welfare system
in which total freedom from responsibility has encouraged an
underclass prone to any form of antisocial behavior. Kurt
Vonnegut's Player Piano
depicts a dystopia in which the centrally controlled economic
system has indeed made material abundance plentiful, but deprived
the mass of humanity of meaningful labor; virtually all work is
menial and unsatisfying, and even very few of the small group that
achieves education is admitted to the elite and its work.
Even in dystopias where the economic system is
not the source of the society's flaws, as in Brave New World, the
state often controls the economy. In Brave New World, a character,
reacting with horror to the suggestion of not being part of the
social body, cites as a reason that everyone works for everyone
else.
Other works feature extensive privatization. In this
context, big businesses often have far more control over the
populace than any kind
of government and thus act as governments themselves instead of
businesses, as can be seen in the novel Jennifer
Government. This is common in the genre of cyberpunk, such Blade
Runner and Snow Crash,
which often features corrupt and all-powerful corporations, often a
megacorporation.
Characteristics of dystopian fiction
Dystopia is generally considered a subgenre of science fiction.The back story
Because a fictional universe has to be constructed, a selectively-told back story of a war, revolution, uprising, critical overpopulation, or other disaster is often introduced early in the narrative. This results in a shift in emphasis of control, from previous systems of government to a government run by corporations, totalitarian dictatorships or bureaucracies.Because dystopian literature typically depicts
events that take place in the future, it often features technology
more advanced than that of contemporary society. Usually, the
advanced technology is controlled exclusively by the group in
power, while the oppressed population is limited to technology
comparable to or more primitive than what we have today.
In order to emphasize the degeneration of
society, the standard of living among the lower and middle classes
is generally poorer than in contemporary society (at least in
United States or Europe). In 1984,
the Inner Party, the upper class of society, also has a standard of
living lower than the upper classes of today. This is not always
the case, however; in Brave New
World and Equilibrium,
people enjoy much higher material living standards in exchange for
the loss of other qualities in their lives, such as independent
thought and emotional depth.
The Hero
Unlike utopian fiction, which often features an outsider to have the world shown him, dystopias seldom feature an outsider as the protagonist. While such a character would more clearly understand the nature of the society, based on comparison to his society, the knowledge of the outside culture subverts the power of the dystopia. When such outsiders are major characters—such as John the Savage in Brave New World—their societies are not such as can assist them against the dystopia.The story usually centers on a protagonist who
questions the society, often feeling intuitively that something is
terribly wrong, such as Winston
Smith in 1984,
or V
from Alan
Moore's V for
Vendetta. The hero comes to believe that escape or even
overturning the social order is possible and decides to act at the
risk of life and limb; in some utopias, this may appear as
irrational even to him, but he still acts. In Half-life 2,
the player's character Gordon
Freeman is assigned a messianic status by the oppressed
citizens of City 17, and
eventually fulfils their hopes by igniting an armed rebellion and
deposing the city's Administration. Significantly, Freeman is
involuntarily inserted into the dystopian society in secret and is
hence nicknamed "the one free man" by the resistance movement,
lacking the restrictions imposed by citizenship in City 17. This
freedom, the result of his being an outsider, partly allows him to
evade the surveillance of the Combine Overwatch, and so contributes
to his success in the role of protagonist.
Another popular archetype of hero in the more
modern dystopian literature is the Vonnegut
hero, a hero who is in high-standing within the social system,
but sees how wrong everything is, and attempts to either change the
system or bring it down, such as Paul Proteus of Kurt
Vonnegut's novel Player
Piano.
The Conflict
In many cases, the hero's conflict brings him to a representative of the dystopia who articulates its principles, from Mustapha Mond in Brave New World to O'Brien in 1984.There is usually a group of people somewhere in
the society who are not under the complete control of the state,
and in whom the hero of the novel usually puts his or her hope,
although often he or she still fails to change anything. In
Orwell's 1984 they are the "proles" (Latin for "offspring", from
which "proletariat"
is derived), in Huxley's Brave New World they are the people on the
reservation, and in We by Zamyatin they are
the people outside the walls of the One State. In Fahrenheit
451 by Ray
Bradbury, they are the "book people" past the river and outside
the city.
Climax and dénouement
The hero's goal is either escape or destruction of the social order. However, the story is often (but not always) unresolved''. That is, the narrative may deal with individuals in a dystopian society who are unsatisfied, and may rebel, but ultimately fail to change anything. Sometimes they themselves end up changed to conform to the society's norms. This narrative arc to a sense of hopelessness can be found in such classic dystopian works as 1984. It contrasts with much fiction of the future, in which a hero succeeds in resolving conflicts or otherwise changing things for the better.Destroying dystopia
The destruction of dystopia is frequently a very different sort of work than one in which it is preserved. Indeed, the subversion of a dystopian society, with its potential for conflict and adventure, is a staple of science fiction stories. Poul Anderson's short story "Sam Hall" depicts the subversion of a dystopia heavily dependent on surveillance. Robert A. Heinlein's "If This Goes On—" liberates the United States from a fundamentalist theocracy, where the underground rebellion is organized by the Freemasons. Cordwainer Smith's The Rediscovery of Man series depicts a society recovering from its dystopian period, beginning in "The Dead Lady of Clown Town" with the discovery that its utopia was impossible to maintain. Although these and other societies are typical of dystopias in many ways, they all have not only flaws but exploitable flaws. The ability of the protagonists to subvert the society also subverts the monolithic power typical of a dystopia. In some cases the hero manages to overthrow the dystopia by motivating the (previously apathetic) populace. In the dystopian video game Half-Life 2 the downtrodden citizens of City 17 rally around the figure of Gordon Freeman and overthrow their Combine oppressors.If destruction of the dystopia is not possible,
escape may be, if the dystopia does not control the world. In
Ray
Bradbury's Fahrenheit
451, the main character succeeds in fleeing and finding tramps
who have dedicated themselves to memorizing books to preserve them.
In the book Logan's Run,
the main characters make their way to an escape from the otherwise
inevitable euthanasia on their 21st birthday (30th in the later
film version). Because such dystopias must necessarily control less
of the world than the protagonist can reach, and the protagonist
can elude capture, this motif also subverts the dystopia's power.
In Lois Lowry's The Giver the
main character Jonas is able to run away from 'The Community' and
escapes to 'Elsewhere' where people have memories.
Sometimes, this escape leads to the inevitable:
The protagonist making a mistake that usually brings about the end
of a rebel society, usually living where people think is a legend.
This concept is brought to life in Scott Westerfeld's novel
Uglies. The
main character accidentally brings the government into the secret
settlement of the Smoke. She then infiltrates the government to
escape, but chooses to join the society for the greater good.
Depictions of dystopias in various media
Dystopias are a common theme in many kinds of fiction. The lists linked below contain extensive lists of works with dystopian themes.See also
References
dystopia in Afrikaans: Distopie
dystopia in Bulgarian: Антиутопия
dystopia in Catalan: Distopia
dystopia in Czech: Antiutopie
dystopia in Danish: Dystopi
dystopia in German: Dystopie
dystopia in Estonian: Düstoopia
dystopia in Spanish: Distopía
dystopia in Esperanto: Malutopio
dystopia in Persian: پادآرمانشهر
dystopia in French: Dystopie
dystopia in Galician: Distopía
dystopia in Korean: 디스토피아
dystopia in Indonesian: Distopia
dystopia in Icelandic: Dystópía
dystopia in Italian: Distopia
dystopia in Hebrew: דיסטופיה
dystopia in Hungarian: Disztópia
dystopia in Dutch: Dystopie
dystopia in Japanese: ディストピア
dystopia in Norwegian: Dystopi
dystopia in Polish: Antyutopia
dystopia in Portuguese: Distopia
dystopia in Romanian: Distopie
dystopia in Russian: Антиутопия
dystopia in Simple English: Dystopia
dystopia in Slovak: Antiutópia
dystopia in Serbian: Дистопија
dystopia in Finnish: Dystopia
dystopia in Swedish: Dystopi
dystopia in Thai: ดิสโทเปีย
dystopia in Turkish: Distopya
dystopia in Ukrainian: Антиутопія
dystopia in Chinese: 反乌托邦
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Agapemone, Arcadia, Big Rock-Candy
Mountain, Canaan,
Cloudcuckooland,
Cockaigne, Eden, Eldorado, Erewhon, Garden of Eden,
Goshen, Happy Valley,
Land of Youth, Laputa,
Never-Never-land, Neverland, New Atlantis,
Pandemonium,
Quivira, Shangri-la,
Utopia, cloudland, dreamland, faerie, fairyland, heaven, kakotopia, kingdom come, land
of dreams, land of enchantment, land of faerie, land of plenty,
land of promise, lotus land, millennium, paradise, promised land,
utopia, wonderland