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UTOPIANISM UTOPIANISM

Ss388 utopianism presentation

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Page 1: Ss388   utopianism presentation

UTOPIANISMUTOPIANISM

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WHAT IS UTOPIANISM?

Where did it come from? What does it mean to me?

CaN iT aCTuaLLY eXiST?

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Utopia:

An ideally perfect place, especially in its social, political, and moral aspects.

Utopia can be defined as paradise on Earth, Nirvana or Heaven on Earth.

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Background information:

It was originally a word coined in 1516 by the author Sir Thomas More. “Utopia” was the title of his book, as was the name of the imaginary island that harbored the perfect society.

The word “utopia” is derived from two Greek words. The first is eutopia, which means “good place”. The second is outopia, which means “no place”.

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Early Roots:Talks of the “Perfect Society”

- Plato’s The Republic:

Plato sketches the basic political structure and laws of

an ideal city named Magnesia.

- The Garden of Eden from The Book of Genesis:

Judeo-Christian Paradise; created by God, where all that inhabit in it live in harmony

- Confucius’ The Book of Rites (around Plato’s era)

Talks about the final phase of human development and “the state of eternal peace” from the last stage of the ideal society.

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Relevant Literary Works:

Lost Horizon (written by James Hilton - 1933):

Shangri-La is a fictional place described in the novel. Hidden in the Tibetan mountains and synonymous as an earthly paradise, it suggests that such paradise on earth must be somewhere if only man were able to find it.

Brave New World (written by Aldous Huxley – 1932):

A society in which babies are mass-produced and assigned social classes before they are infants. The idea behind this engineering of humans is for social stability.

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1984 (written by George Orwell – 1949)

Dystopia:

An imaginary place or state in which the condition of life is extremely bad, as from deprivation, oppression, or terror.

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GROUP DISCUSSION!

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PROS

&

CONS

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PROS:

Living in harmony with others

No motivation for war or oppression

No conflicts

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CONS:

Ethical concerns

Differences with each individuals’ ideals

Boring!

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Experiments in Utopia:

The Mormon Church (One of many communal utopias) -

a) Orderville, Utah (experiment 1830s-1880s)

b) Nauvoo, Illinois (1849-1856?)

French Icarians? – Moved in when Mormons moved out (led by Brigham Young)?

Current American Communal Communities (The Amish)

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Examples ofExamples ofUtopianism/Utopianism/ Dystopia in Dystopia in

CinemaCinema

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Demolition Man

Equilibrium

Fahrenheit 451

Gattaca

The Matrix

The Stepford Wives

The Village

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Gattaca Gattaca

•Gattaca Corp. is an aerospace firm in the future. During this time society analyzes your DNA and determines where you belong in life

•Society now discriminates against your genes, instead of your gender, race or religion.

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Equilibrium Equilibrium

•In a futuristic world, a strict regime has eliminated war by suppressing emotions: books, art and music are strictly forbidden and feeling is a crime punishable by death.

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Demolition ManDemolition Man

•Set in a crime free society

•Loss of personal freedoms

•Those who do not agree w/ the system are outcast or imprisoned

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THE END

YAAAAAAY!