"Utopia" Essays and Research Papers

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    chyra butler

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    Comparison Utopia vs Dystopia Utopia vs Dystopia Page 1Zoom in Page 1 2 Next Essay length: 912 words Submitted: 30/08/2010 Saved View my saved essays Submit similar essay Share this essay: Are you in the right place? Jump to English Literature and see how teachers think you should prepare in: GCSE 32‚699 AS and A-level 8‚360 University 2‚270 AS AND A LEVEL OTHER CRITICISM & COMPARISON The first 200 words of this essay... Utopia vs. dystopia Utopia is the idea of

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    man’s  thinking  by  creating  an  ideological  society  in  his  work‚  Utopia‚ while in The Prince‚ Niccolo Machiavelli attempts to teach man how to deal  with  human  nature.  This  exemplifies  that  Machiavelli’s  concept  is  much  more  realistic   than  More’s;  therefore  Machiavelli  better  represents  concepts  of  human  characteristics  such  as  leadership‚ religion‚ and military.  In  Thomas  More’s  Utopia‚  Utopia  is  a  description  of  the  ideal  human  society  that  demonstrates 

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    current Receiver Of Memory’s apprentice. His world quickly turns blue after it happens. The major reason that there are similarities and differences in “The Giver is‚ because Modern Society is more of a dystopia‚ and Jonas’s Society is more of a Utopia.

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    Brave New World - Aldous Huxley The illusion of a utopia is very imminent in this novel‚ some of the factors that disqualify it from being a utopia and‚ in fact‚ make it a dystopia are the illusion of happiness‚ removal of human desire‚ and prohibition of assembly and free thought. The Illusion of Happiness is shown in this book in many different ways and are usually connected to the controllers of the state. Soma is labeled as the perfect drug by the Brave New World and also the World State

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    Nothing Is Perfect

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    I‚ for certain‚ know I have. Yet‚ if you really stop to think about it‚ perfection isn ’t attainable because we always want something bigger and better as human nature. In the novel‚Brave New World ‚ by Aldous Huxley‚ there is strongly influential Utopia existing. Even in a controlled society such as the one represented in this book‚ the people still revolt against the government. There are people in this book who change things‚ like Bernard or John the Savage‚ and there are people who help keep this

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    Dystopia

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    authoritarian or totalitarian governments are in charge. There often made of “repressive social control system‚ a lack or total absence of individual freedoms and expression‚ and a state of constant warfare or violence.” Many dystopias are combined with utopias to offer a metaphor of the different directions humanity can go (Good Reads). There are four different types of control the government could have in dystopian novels. Corporate Control is when a large corporation controls its people through advertising

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    In the story The One Who Walked Away from Omelas by Ursula K. Le Guin is about a perfect utopian society without any misery. Omelas’s happiness is based on discrimination‚ pain is intellectual‚ and evil is interesting. Omelas finds it necessary to sacrifices one child’s misery. However‚ the people choose to live life in content knowing that the child is locked in despair because it remains them to be happy. According to the city of Omelas‚ there has to be an immoral sacrifice to make the citizens

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    A utopia is an ideal society that provides commentary on what’s wrong with our society. What should be improved or changed. But are utopias possible? Utopias come in all different shapes and sizes. They come from different time periods‚ and different cultures all try to accomplish their utopia. Many have come and gone but most vanish. It can be the biggest utopia possible‚ or the smallest one. But each community faces trials to come in the years. Articles like “Why Utopias Fail‚” “4 Utopian Communities

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    pedestal‚ held by many as a panacea to many of the modern world’s woes such as poverty and illness. Yet‚ much as Science has brought‚ and continues to bring‚ salvation to many in the form of new technologies‚ Science cannot create many aspects of the utopia we so crave. A perfect world‚ some assert‚ is one in which society is harmonious and all humans have “perfect genes”‚ bestowing upon them favourable and much coveted characteristics. It is also one where the environment we live in is free from pollution

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    Human Nature and Power

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    composure of virtually every society. By establishing that premise‚ many went on to create an ideal society with the intention of developing that thought. Niccolo Machiavelli and Thomas More are outstanding representatives among them. In both More’s Utopia and Machiavelli’s The Prince‚ perfect societies are constructed. However‚ More and Machiavelli have different opinions about the human nature in relation to the role of power and authority. Thomas More optimistically describes human nature

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