1984 Dystopian

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With books such as The Hunger Games, The Maze Runner, and The Divergent Series, Dystopian themed novels and movies have become increasingly more popular recently in pop culture. George Orwell was therefore ahead of the game when he wrote 1984 in 1949, and it is still up to par with all of the recent dystopian books. This genre has gained popularity partly due to the rising paranoia that governments are becoming too powerful, and we as a society will soon be living in a totalitarian society. With countries like North Korea, it is not too crazy of an idea that this might eventually spread around the world with more dictators like Kim Jong Un. Compared to really any book or example of extreme government control, Big Brother in 1984 is taking it to the extreme. This is why the book is considered a classic, because it takes the idea of government control to a level that one could barely even imagine. Two different types of dystopian societies are portrayed in 1984 and Divergent, but both are totalitarian nonetheless.
While watching Divergent, one could make the argument that, compared to the party in 1984, that they were not even living in a government that has complete control. This is because that on the surface the citizens appear to have free will …show more content…

In a way, the way that the government in Divergent was able to deceive all of their citizens into thinking they were living the perfect life was amazing in itself. There seemed to be far more cases of people turning traitors in 1984 than in the movie. However, the true genius of the party was its ability to turn traitors into the most loving people towards Big Brother. This was the subtlety that made it so much more advanced of a dystopian society. It just goes to show that even in growing genres, such as the dystopian one, the classics remain on

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