The Sword and Laser discussion

This topic is about
Earth Girl
Need help describing a type of setting
date
newest »


As a side note I've been meaning to read A Calculated Life for a while, I love the concept from the description.

I love love loved it, but most of the action takes place in the mind of the point of view character, which is this amazing churning thing.

I can't say I love this term but I think those used to be described as "cautionary tales." They are some of my favorite types of science fiction - books like Stand on Zanzibar or The Diamond Age: or, A Young Lady's Illustrated Primer stay with me longer than space battles.

I think you are right though, when you imply that arguments could be drawn from every form of government, past and present, that fall into the definition of dystopian society. The most glaring example would be Nazi Germany, but you wouldn't have to go too far into America's past to find similar cases (i.e. the trail of tears, or the forced relocation of Japanese-Americans during WWII). The allure of dystopian settings is that they mirror "what was" or "what could be."

I've read Omelas. I'd argue that it's more of a thought experiment than a narrative. Or a sermon, kind of. It doesn't really have a plot. That doesn't mean that it is not powerful.
I'd argue that The Giver is actually a planned dystopia. It fits the description that people thought they could build a perfect society if they could just remove X, where in The Giver, X is (view spoiler) .

I have seen Dickinson's Dystopian used before for the dystopian that appears out of capitalism/freemarket. It's also commonly called ____punk, with the ____ corresponding to what kind of setting you are in.

So, Earth Girl might be space colonization punk?

Straight away I think of the human sacrifices of the Aztecs, many days a week the blood ran in torrents, like the Terror in Republican France, except routine.
You've got Utopia, Dystopia, being the opposite, why not Psych-a-topia.


YA Space Colonization Punk sure why not.
Reading the synopsis and reviews this actually sounds pretty good, why the heck does it only have a 3.75? YA normally has overinflated scores.

My guess? The narrator/POV character starts out bitter and abrasive. The first chapter is the weakest. She gets better when you get to see her doing what she loves. But I could see people only reading the first bit and going "ugh, no".

An unplanned, organically grown society with a flaw? Sounds like basic human culture to me...aside from a few cases such as the Spartans, virtually every human culture in human history has been unplanned and organically grown.
Or am I missing the point of the question?

I meant, like a glaring obvious flaw. Like, no one planned a utopia based on a flawed premise, but it kind of grew into a dystopia all on its own. There's a major underclass or injustice.
Books mentioned in this topic
Earth Girl (other topics)Earth Girl (other topics)
The Giver (other topics)
Stand on Zanzibar (other topics)
The Diamond Age: Or, a Young Lady's Illustrated Primer (other topics)
More...
But what do you call it when you've got an unplanned, organically grown society with a glaring flaw? The most common type is a society where things are actually pretty fair and good for most folks, but there's some sort of underclass for whom things are really quite awful. That's true in Earth Girl, the YA novel I've just started, and in A Calculated Life, which is interesting in that there are kind of two distinct underclasses: the tightly-defined lives of the artificial people and another group whose identity is a mild spoiler. I've seen it a number of times before.
One could argue that the United States government falls into this category, because classism and racism cause wide, wide gulfs in quality of living, although I don't want to go too deep into that and provoke an argument.
Unplanned dystopia? Seedy underbelly? I don't have a term for this.