Toward a “Hunger Games” Society?
Google Image Thomas More, the lawyer who became England’s chancellor under the infamous Henry VIII and was later declared a saint, wrote a book called “Utopia” in 1516. It was about a fictitious “perfect” island society. The Greek word, utopia, literally means “no place,” perhaps indicating that More was being satirical about the possibility of such a place ever existing. Today we have a derived word, “dystopia,” which, according to Wikipedia, also comes from the Greek and literally means “not good place.” The term is now used to describe a seemingly endless parade of modern novels, films and dramas about societies, usually in the future, which are characterized by dehumanization and totalitarianism. Though the name “dystopia” wasn’t used until recently, the genre has been around for some time in modern literature. I remember reading, for instance, Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World and and George Orwell’s 1984 in my youth. Possibly most responsible for the explosion of inter...