1 / 104

Dystopian Fiction

Dystopian Fiction. Dystopian Fiction. Dystopian Fiction usually imagines the FUTURE. It is a criticism of an aspect of society that the author dislikes. It is a WARNING of what may happen. Three Titles:. The Machine Stops (1909) Brave new World (1932) 1984 (1948). The Machine Stops (1909).

crwys
Télécharger la présentation

Dystopian Fiction

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Dystopian Fiction

  2. Dystopian Fiction • Dystopian Fiction usually imagines the FUTURE. • It is a criticism of an aspect of society that the author dislikes. • It is a WARNING of what may happen.

  3. Three Titles: • The Machine Stops (1909) • Brave new World (1932) • 1984 (1948)

  4. The Machine Stops (1909) • The Machine Stops is a SHORT STORY by E.M. Forster.

  5. Questions to consider: • What does Forster dislike? • What is BAD about his imagined future? • Were his fears in any way accurate?

  6. The Machine Stops • The Machine imagines a world where everyone lives in rooms underground.

  7. The Machine • Their lives are controlled by a machine which regulates their air, feeds them, bathes them etc.

  8. The Book of the Machine • The Book of the Machine is the machine’s manual. • It has become like a Bible to the people who live in this society.

  9. Religion • Though religion has been abolished, people have started praying to the machine. • The Machine, was of course, created by man.

  10. The Committee of the Machine • The Committee of the Machine are the government of this society. • The worst punishment that they can inflict is HOMELESSNESS.

  11. Homelessness • Homelessness means being sent to live of the surface. • People can no longer breathe the air. • Homelessness therefore means death.

  12. Control The Committee decides: • Who can have children. • Where people live. • When people die.

  13. Alone • People communicate through the machine’s television screens, but everyone lives alone. • People have thousands of friends but rarely visit each other or physically leave their rooms.

  14. Are People Happy? “Something "good enough" had long since been accepted by our race.” • People find life acceptable. • But most importantly, they love the machine.

  15. Ideas • The only pastime people have is sharing ideas - usually in the form of lectures with each other through their television screens.

  16. The Story:

  17. Vashti and Kuno • Vashti worships the machine and is contented with her life. • Like most people she never leaves her room.

  18. Vashti and Kuno • She is called by her son Kuno who demands that she come and see him. • Very reluctantly she agrees to get on a plane and visit him. (everything is connected by tunnels, so she would never have to step outside.)

  19. Kuno • Kuno is dissatisfied with his life underground and wants to visit the surface. • Though there are no rules against this, the idea of leaving the machine seems worrying and wrong to Vashti.

  20. On the Surface • Kuno does go outside and nearly dies when his respirator falls off. • He is thrilled to see the grass and the trees outside.

  21. The “Worms” • On the surface Kuno is attacked by “white worms.” • They turn out to be part of the machine. • He says he sees a woman on the surface killed by a “worm.”

  22. Surface-Dwellers • This confirms that there are people who have been made “homeless” and survived.

  23. Threat to society • Kuno is threatened with homelessness. • Vashti is very upset by his story of the surface. • She thinks that it is terrible he would want to leave their underground world.

  24. Going to the surface • Respirators are abolished as everyone agrees that there is something wrong in wanting to experience things first hand. • They agree that it is better to repeat other people’s ideas instead.

  25. “The Machine Stops” • Kuno warns Vashti that “the machine stops.” • He is telling her that there are problems with the machine. • Vashti refuses to believe something so frightening.

  26. The Machine Stops • But things start to go wrong in the underground rooms. • The air turns bad and things stop working. • The machine controls their whole lives and without it they are helpless.

  27. The End • Vashti eventually panics and leaves her room and finds everyone else is doing the same thing. • Kuno and Vashti find each other in the corridor. • Unable to live outside or stay below ground, they and everyone else will die.

  28. Optimistic Ending • They finally have speak to each other as mother and son. • Kuno assures his mother that the “homeless” surface-dwellers will rebuild a better society.

  29. Optimistic Ending 'Oh, tomorrow - some fool will start the Machine again, tomorrow.' 'Never,' said Kuno, 'never. Humanity has learnt its lesson.'

  30. An accurate warning?

  31. Modern life • Obviously the society imagined in The Machine Stops” has not come true. • However people are often surprised how accurately Forster described something very like the Internet almost 90 years before it was invented.

  32. Fear of Technology • Forster was worried that machines were taking over people’s lives. • He thought that they would distance people from one another. • People say the same thing about social networking sites today.

  33. Brave New World 1932

  34. Brave New World

  35. Brave New World • “Brave New World” is a quote from The Tempest. • In The Tempest when Miranda she sees humans for the first time says: “Oh brave new world that has such people in it”

  36. THINK ABOUT why Huxley used this quote for his title.

  37. Aldous Huxley • Huxley wrote A LOT of books. • Brave New World is his most famous.

  38. What kind of dystopia is Brave New World? • In Brave New World people are kept constantly “HAPPY.”

  39. World State • Unlike the 3 state dystopia imagined in 1984, Brave New World imagines a global “World State.”

  40. How do you keep the whole world happy?

  41. Soma • Soma is a drug produced by the government. • It is designed to make you feel happy with no side effects (like a hangover, for example).

  42. Sex • People have sex ALL THE TIME in Brave New World, but just for fun. • Great precautions are taken to ensure women don’t get pregnant.

  43. Conditioning • People are taught to be satisfied with their future lives. • As children they are manipulated to make sure they will grow up with certain attitudes.

  44. Making Babies

  45. Making Babies • In Brave New World children are CLONED. • Childbirth is considered to be a disgusting and embarrassing thing.

  46. Class • During the process of making the babies doctors decide what their future jobs will be. • The Alpha Class are made clever and strong • The Epsilon Class are made stupid.

  47. Suited to their tasks • Epsilons are then deprived of oxygen so their brains don’t develop as fully. • They are taught to be happy that they don’t have all the responsibilities of the Alphas.

  48. Indoctrination • The babies and children live in large centres until they are adults. • Their beliefs and attitudes are formed by messages that are played whilst they are asleep.

  49. Indoctrination • The children are also conditioned through treats and electric shocks to like and dislike certain things……

  50. Indoctrination • As children they are taken to visit the “death hospital” where people are taken to die. • All the best toys are kept there and they are given sweets. • This means they have no fear of death.

More Related