There are many different definitions for Utopia and Dystopia and I picked out what I thought were the best ones. A Utopia is an ideally perfect place, especially in it’s social, political and moral aspects. A dystopia is an imagined place or state in which everything is unpleasant or bad, typically a totalitarian or environmentally degraded one. Utopias always turn into Dystopias because there will always be someone unhappy. Oceania and Scientology are both allusions of utopian societies but both turn into dystopian societies because a world without war and crime is impossible.
In George Orwell’s 1984 he makes the citizens in the book feel like that they are living in a utopia when really they are living in a dystopia. …show more content…
The citizens think that everything is great in their society because they do not know better. The conditions they are living in are not very good at all. One of the main slogans in the book is “BIG BROTHER IS WATCHING YOU” (Orwell 2). You are under constant surveillance in this society. A way you are under constant surveillance are by the telescreens. The telescreens are Tv’s that monitors everybody’s actions and speech. In this society you cannot escape the telescreens. They are everywhere. You can not really get away with anything because they will always find out. Another quote in this book says “The Party seeks power entirely for its own sake. We are not interested in the good of others; we are interested solely in power, pure power”(Orwell 263). This quote is saying that the government does not care about the people and what they are feeling, They are just worried about power, because they need power. WIthout power in this government they would not know what to do. They can never be without power because Big brother is always watching you through the telescreens. The telescreens are a big part of why 1984 is actually a