False utopia: Difference between revisions

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'''Discovery of the dystopian truth''' is a plot frequent and common to dystopian novels.  In this plot, the central POV-character/protagonist initially believes they live in a utopia, or at least an okay world. During the course of the work they discover the truth -- that their world is actually dystopian.  
'''False utopia''' or '''discovery of the dystopian truth''' is a plot frequent and common to dystopian novels.  In this plot, the central POV-character/protagonist initially believes they live in a utopia, or at least an okay world. During the course of the work they discover the truth -- that their world is actually dystopian.  


==Examples==
==Examples==
* ''We'' by Evgeny Zamyatin
* ''[[This Perfect Day]]'' by [[Ira Levin]]
* ''[[This Perfect Day]]'' by [[Ira Levin]]
* ''[[1984 (novel)]]'' by [[George Orwell]]
* ''[[1984 (novel)]]'' by [[George Orwell]]
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[[Category:Dystopias]]
[[Category:Dystopias]]
[[Category:Themes and tropes]]
[[Category:Themes and tropes]]
[[category:Social themes]]
[[category:Themes and tropes by name]]
[[category:Themes and tropes by name]]
[[category:Social themes]]

Latest revision as of 09:47, 7 June 2010

False utopia or discovery of the dystopian truth is a plot frequent and common to dystopian novels. In this plot, the central POV-character/protagonist initially believes they live in a utopia, or at least an okay world. During the course of the work they discover the truth -- that their world is actually dystopian.

Examples

Sheri Tepper's The Gate to Women's Country plays with this theme, but the novel is ambiguous about the society.

Many YA and children's books have been written that fulfill this trope. These include: