Document Type
Thesis
First Advisor
Dr. Rebecca Belcher-Rankin
Publication Date
5-2019
Scholarship Domain(s)
Scholarship of Discovery
Abstract
This thesis analyzed common aspects of six major works of dystopian literature to assess their commonalities, as well as their authors’ motivations in writing. Dystopian literature explores the major flaws of humanity, as well as the extent to which society could descend into chaos while simultaneously believing it is creating a better world. This thesis did not argue that within the studied works are all the same dystopian characteristics. Instead, it analyzed select dystopian qualities and made comparisons between the dystopian novels that share them, all of which were impacted by the utopian goals modeled in Plato’s The Republic, Thomas More’s Utopia, Sir Francis Bacon’s New Atlantic, and H. G. Wells's A Modern Utopia. These shared characteristics demonstrate that humanity has been fearing the end of the world for several thousand years. As such, this thesis suggests that the prevalence of dystopian literature may not necessarily signal the result of the coming end times, but instead may be the result of the natural human fears of chaos, abused power, and the end of the world.
Recommended Citation
Kalafut, Marlena G., "It's not the end of the world: an analysis of the similarities in dystopian literature and their shared refletion of the innate fears of humanity" (2019). Honors Program Projects. 98.
https://digitalcommons.olivet.edu/honr_proj/98
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Comments
Honors Cohort 9