A dystopian society is a world where human rights are violated, individualism is suppressed and human dignity is trampled. The result is a society often characterised by chaos, suffering and despair.
Does it sound familiar?
At a time plagued by a search for easy answers, desire for authoritarianism, burgeoning information chaos and waning faith in democracy, George Orwell’s cautionary tale
“1984” increasingly comes to mind.
Phrases such as “It doesn’t matter what you think, but how you think”, “He who controls the past controls the future; he who controls the present controls the past”, “War is peace. Freedom is slavery.” “Ignorance is power” or “Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two equals four” are a painful reminder that dystopia is something that is with us all the time – as a result of a thought, possibility, choice or simply a mistake, a short-sighted choice. In today’s world, it all seems disturbingly close. But it is supposed to be disturbing. We are meant to feel uncomfortable.