lollardfish (
lollardfish) wrote2008-02-03 12:31 pm
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Ok sci-fi fans, what are your favorite science-fiction utopias? I'm thinking about teaching a class on utopias next year, and want to use some reasonably contemporary fiction (as well as Plato, More, Bellamy, Lost Horizon, SimCity, and other stuff).

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I do a dystopia assignment with my AP Language class. Here's the assignment sheet: http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dg384q3w_56f7fr2c&pli=1
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Anyway... Oz is sometimes viewed as Baum's utopian vision for America. Could be worth considering in and of itself.
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(I may be updating my Children's Media Culture comp class this summer, and the wheels in my head are now turning...)
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Every once in a while, people on my AP listserv dismiss Wicked as "non-AP-worthy"... and I beg to differ, usually posting a long defense of it as a clever and highly topical satire. It's worth a look. It's too bad most of the author's follow-ups just weren't as solid.
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"many of them have seen the musical"....sometimes I forget how culturally challenged much of the US is, simply on account of its isolation, and distance from major cities. Here I am, an English professor; yet I've never gotten to see the show, b/c it's never toured anywhere vaguely near anywhere I've lived. (Tho it did finally tour through a place I -used- to live, but I didn't have the time for the 16-hr roundtrip drive to go see it.)
Ah well. Perhaps someday.
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You have no idea how many stupid and insecure and parochial and unimaginative and ignorant and bull-headed and canon-worshipping so-called "AP English teachers" there are on my list. For every three or four who do know this about student essays, there is one who thinks if it's not written on The Scarlet Letter, it won't get a top score.
And then there are those who believe that The Kite Runner is the literary achievement of the generation...
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The judges loved it! One of them (himself a Buffy fan, as it turned out) nearly fell off his chair laughing when she announced what she'd be singing. And it most certainly was NOT something they'd already heard 6 or 8 times that day. We are convinced that her having the creativity to do that was part of the reason she got in.
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Utopia?
I am now reminded of a story in which everything in the world dissolved except the people; there was no sickness, no death, no growth, no hunger, just infinite existence on a featureless globe. This had happened because the Devil had convinced every single soul on earth that they wanted to live forever, so their wish was granted. The hero managed to finagle a way out of the wish and life returned to normal--wish I knew the name and author.
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Here are the sites:
http://www.politicalcompass.org/
http://www.moral-politics.com/xpolitics.aspx?menu=Home
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I actually plan to have them play the new Sim City game with a comparable pedagogical goal, assuming I can get my friends who made it to donate some copies. I'll also look into flying one of them out to talk about trying to model society. The new game forces you to make choices that lead towards different kinds of societies.
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Since you asked
I liked this one, in some ways it is a "realistic" utopia
for some interesting, but unrealistic utopian ideas:
The Probability Broach by L. Neil Smith (a libertarian utopia)
The Truth Machine by James L. Halperin (The invention of a "infallible lie detector" leads to utopia through the surrender of privacy)
I happened to discover these two books in the same month. An interesting contrast of extremes.
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it's a wonderful world
Don't overlook Orwell, natch.
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Diane Duane's Doors books (The Door Into Fire, The Door Into Shadow, The Door Into Sunset). This is Utopia-under-attack, and the plot is about how the heros beat back said attacks. Warning: strong sexual themes, including homosexuality* and rape; nothing really graphic, but not glossed over either.
The Neandertal world in Robert J. Sawyer's Hominids trilogy. Again, not a perfect Utopia, and one of the problems with it is clearly delineated in the third book, but the notion of the Alibi Archives might be a good one for discussion. Warning: one major plot hook is the rape of the female protagonist, and the (IMO very realistic) descriptions of her PTSD-type reactions to it; also, the Neandertal society is organized around universal bisexuality.
* Actually, homosexuality and heterosexuality per se don't really exist in Duane's universe; you love who you love, and no labels are attached to it. This is part of the reason I see it as a Utopia, but people who can't accept that worldview are going to have a problem with it.
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It is much easier to think of interesting literature about dystopias than about utopias.
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People teach whole classes on renaissance utopias--More, Bacon's New Atlantis, etc. All that new world fantasia stuff. The Tempest.
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Which would be a fun thing for a medieval historian to do.
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The Dispossessed is possibly the best of the bunch already mentioned, and LeGuin doesn't hide the fact that her utopian society has difficulties.
Wicked's society is becoming more and more oppressive, and the WWoftheW starts out with good intentions that go horribly wrong.
Not mentioned yet: "With Folded Hands" and The Humanoids, both by Jack Williamson. "With Folded Hands" is sufficient for finding the utopian-but-oops flavor that Williamson presents. Read the book only if you liked the short story.
Ian Banks has a series of books that contain, among other things, artificial intelligences that run a society known as The Culture, which appears to be genuinely utopian. Not all societies are part of The Culture though, so there are conflicts. Fair warning, I find Banks reliably loses my interest midway through a book, and I have to force myself to get past that to finish the book.
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