Dystopian fiction is almost always an analysis of contemporary society and trends within it. The novels in this study all deal with how a regime can control its populace. Three of the main means of control are religion, sex and language. Religion can be used as the leading means of control as in The Handmaid’s Tale, or to reinforce the other means, as in Brave New World. Religion can be shaped to serve the ends of the regime, instead of satisfying the individual’s spiritual needs. This is a common feature of dystopian fiction. The natural sex instinct is one of the most powerful human drives and because of that it needs to be controlled by the dystopian regime. The Handmaid’s Tale and Nineteen Eighty-Four controls it, and through it the pop...
“The Brave New World” is a fantastic novel written by Aldous Huxley in 1932. In this new era, gover...
Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale is a well-accomplished novel that won countless awards and became a par...
Dystopian literature, in which writers imagine a chaotic, uncertain future, has become a trend in co...
Dystopian fiction is almost always an analysis of contemporary society and trends within it. The nov...
This study examines three works of dystopian fiction that concern themselves with the rise of “disci...
Sexuality and sexual behavior in relation to gender roles are prominent issues in socio-political de...
Huxley`s novel Brave New World and Orwell`s Nineteen Eighty-Four belong to the genre of dystopian li...
The purpose of this research is to examine power in dystopian and anti-utopian literature as it rela...
Throughout the thesis, fields of study within sociolinguistics will be introduced and sociolinguisti...
The present study explores the role of religion and spirituality in feminist visions of the future. ...
This article explores the effect of power and language in dystopian society. I attempt to show that ...
The reality presented in dystopian literature is a backlash against some modern trends and contempo...
This thesis talks about the origins of the literary genre of utopia and the way it developed through...
This thesis examines how dystopian novels depict various forms of discipline\ud exercised by a gover...
The dystopian novel Brave New World (1932) by British writer Aldous Huxley (1894 – 1963) depicts a f...
“The Brave New World” is a fantastic novel written by Aldous Huxley in 1932. In this new era, gover...
Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale is a well-accomplished novel that won countless awards and became a par...
Dystopian literature, in which writers imagine a chaotic, uncertain future, has become a trend in co...
Dystopian fiction is almost always an analysis of contemporary society and trends within it. The nov...
This study examines three works of dystopian fiction that concern themselves with the rise of “disci...
Sexuality and sexual behavior in relation to gender roles are prominent issues in socio-political de...
Huxley`s novel Brave New World and Orwell`s Nineteen Eighty-Four belong to the genre of dystopian li...
The purpose of this research is to examine power in dystopian and anti-utopian literature as it rela...
Throughout the thesis, fields of study within sociolinguistics will be introduced and sociolinguisti...
The present study explores the role of religion and spirituality in feminist visions of the future. ...
This article explores the effect of power and language in dystopian society. I attempt to show that ...
The reality presented in dystopian literature is a backlash against some modern trends and contempo...
This thesis talks about the origins of the literary genre of utopia and the way it developed through...
This thesis examines how dystopian novels depict various forms of discipline\ud exercised by a gover...
The dystopian novel Brave New World (1932) by British writer Aldous Huxley (1894 – 1963) depicts a f...
“The Brave New World” is a fantastic novel written by Aldous Huxley in 1932. In this new era, gover...
Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale is a well-accomplished novel that won countless awards and became a par...
Dystopian literature, in which writers imagine a chaotic, uncertain future, has become a trend in co...