5 Dystopian Societies That Might Actually Function
byJeff Somers/
June 10, 2015 at 2:00 pm
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Dystopia is—ironically for something pretty terrible—disturbingly popular these days. While a good dystopian government has always been a fun way to depict our inevitablyawful future (I patiently await my sexless utilitarian jumpsuit and dish of Soylent Green), there are oftena lot of missing details. Like, for example, how can an incredibly ridiculous (but evil) government can survive for more than five minutes without a functioning economy or large-scale military force? At least in her classic “bad future” novelThe Handmaid’s Tale, Margaret Atwood heavily implies that the Republic of Gilead is both relatively new, and more or less unstable and doomed to failure. Manywriters just beg for your suspension of disbelief.
Not everyone goes the lazy route when imagininghow a tyrannical government might actually make it work. Here are 5examples of fictional (thank goodness) dystopian governments that seem plausibly likely to function,at least until a peskyheroic teenager leads a revolution.
Dark Disciple: Star Wars
The Empire(Star Wars)
Say what you will about the Star Wars prequels(and there isso much to sayabout them), but Lucas did one thing relatively well: he detailed exactly how the sleepy Republic became the evil Galactic Empire. The reason this dystopia might actually work is simple enough: the new Emperor, aside from having evil powers and a brief monopoly on The Force, also inherited a functioning bureaucracy and immense military machine, not to mention, like Augustus in Rome, the legal authority to back up his claim to power. The Empire might have gone on for a very long time, if not for those meddling kids.
Brave New World
The World State (Brave New World, by Aldous Huxley)
Huxley is one of the few creators of a dystopia to have addressed the wide-rangingdifficulties faced in running a large-scale society predicated on complete control. Whereas manydystopias amount to a single concept that supposedly rules everyone’s lives, back in 1932 Huxley figured out that it would take constant effort to reshape the way people think and behave. His society uses medical, pharmaceutical, and educational techniques to ensure compliance, and the detailed examination is convincing in its thoroughness—possibly because even eight decades later you can still see the seeds of that society in our own.
The Hunger Games (Hunger Games Series #1)
Panem (The Hunger Games, by Suzanne Collins)
At first blush, Collins’ dystopia seems to play fast and loose with the future: Panem is divided up into Districts, each of which provides basically one thing—coal, wheat, livestock—with the citizens of each District doomed to remainthere, regardless of their talents or wishes. But this system might actuallyworkif the central government put enough effort into stopping people from cheating, which it apparently does (if you consider slaughtering dissenters effort). The reason itmight work is simple: the government is artificially controlling supply, demand, and wages everywhere, simultaneously, which create systemic stability—again, assuming no meddling kids get big ideas. It’s almost like there would be no stories at all if not for those meddling kids.
1984
Oceania (1984, by George Orwell)
Similar to Huxley’sBrave New World, Orwell’s dystopia becomes possible through its focus on the little things. Big Brother, as it turns out (seventy-year old spoiler alert), is both the oppressive governmentandthe spunky rebellion. The resources put into monitoring citizens is equaled only by the resources put into designing a honey trap of sorts for the few who retain a spark of imagination—tellingly, the whole story is about how the government identifies, traps, and punishes those who deviate from its commands. Which, realistically, is pretty much all a government like that would have time and resources for.
The Water Knife
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The United States, Five Minutes from Now (The Water Knifeby Paolo Bacigalupi)
This onemay not seem like a proper dystopia—better to call ita snapshot of a dystopia in the making. It imaginesa world five minutes in the future where current drought trends have rendered the Southwestern U.S. a dry hell, and water power brokers control not just water, but life itself. Corporations battle in court over water rights, seeking older and older treaties and deeds to trump their rivals, and violently cutting the pipes and turning off the flow once they’ve retained ownership. It’s this legal wrangling that makes Bacigalupi’s vision sochillingly real: corporations have fought tooth-and-nailover water in the past, and now that it seems to be drying up, it’s very easy to believe they will again, bringing the brutal world ofThe Water Knifeinto reality.
It’s easy to imagine one detail—a lack of choice, constant surveillance—and feel like your work as an author is done. But as these five books prove, it takes a bit more planning and thought to render afunctionalevil government on the page. Any others we missed?