Haphazard
Don't Judge Me!
- Joined
- Apr 14, 2008
- Messages
- 6,704
- MBTI Type
- ENFJ
Amazing.
But anyway, that's not the point. The point is at the top of the post.
Is that it? That it seemed like this had a chance to happen *to some people of particular cultural and political biases*, but it didn't, because we are not apt to plunge into depths of inaccurate dystopic visionsbut instead suffer whiplash by being yanked back and forth?
H, I added a bunch more references for your enjoyment in that post too.
Again, what IS your question?![]()
Usually in books I am very interested in historical context. I did an entire research project on the historical context of various satires, after all.
However I tried to look up historical contexts for this book but what I found was people saying how "frightening" and "relevant" it was.
I suppose I'm not used to the culture shock.
Sorry, Haphazard, but I don't really know anything about you, other than that my girlfriend thinks you're extremely bright.
Mind filling me in a bit on where you're from and anything else you might feel is relevant (I already know you're approximate age), so that I might have a better clue as to why the vision in the book seems to not resonate with you personally?
17, Jewish, suburbanite with severe money troubles. I do not live in a "liberal" area of the USA, but the flavor of conservatism is not redneckish but more of the wealthy sort.
Bingo.
I think I've been offering answers to it, PB.
I think it's, "Why did the vision in this book not affect me?"
(PB: fyi, I decided to offer my opinions on this topic, because I'd written a few posts back and forth with Haphazard about dystopic visions in other authors [Orwell, Philip K. Dick, Bradbury, and Huxley] just minutes before she posted this one.)
Thanks Z; I was seeing what you were answering, but I was hoping H could articulate it more completely, more ... specifically. I wanted to pin down the source of the discontent.
Question still stands.
Thanks for providing the context.![]()
Would megacorporations really fold that easily to something as poor as protestantism?
I'm trying to think. Perhaps the surge in religion she sees is anticommunist sentiment. In communism, religion is a way to hold down the masses. "Under God" was only added in the pledge of allegiance because of the Cold War, after all.
As poor as Protestantism?
According to Max Weber, it was Protestantism that built those megacorporations...
Perhaps.
More likely she's just being reactionary to the rise of religious fundamentalism that took place in the 20th century, itself a reaction to the "death of God" and the underlying sense of uncertainty produced in its wake.
Oh.
I liked the writing style, I just totally didn't get it. I guess I just feel like I'm missing something of vital importance to understanding this book.
And yet, Protestantism isn't going to take them away.
In America, there is an underlying belief that religion and prosperity go hand in hand.
Maybe I'm just stupid...
First of all, ask yourself the following question: If you were going to take over the United States, how would you do it? Would you say, "I'm a socialist and we're all going to be equal"? No, you would not, because it wouldn't work. Would you say, "I'm a liberal and we are going to have a society of multiple toleration"? You probably wouldn't say that if you wanted mass support. You would be much more likely to say, "I have the word from God and this is the way we should run things." That probably would have more of a chance of working, and in fact there are a number of movements in the States saying just that, and getting lots of dollars and influence.
Thanks for the explanation H. I hear what you are saying. I think though it's important to remember that the very definition of a dystopia excludes certain social issues and isolates and exaggerates others in order to point out negative qualities of the ones under examination.
Thus, many of the "loose ends" you rightly point out here, are *poof* magically gone. So interestingly, complaining about the lack of realism is irrelevant in the context of any dystopian "thought experiment."