Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 12 – For most of
modern times, radicals and those who want radical change have used ideal images
of a utopian future they would like to create. But now, Igor Eidman says, such
people and even more national leaders instead are using dystopias, images of a horrific future they say that
only they can prevent.
There have always been utopias and dystopias,
but up to now, the former rather than the latter have become the basis for the
formation of mass movements, the Russian sociologist says. In one way, this
makes sense: “few will believe in any promised birth future after Auschwitz and
the GULAG” (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5DA1F70484C8F§ion_id=50A6C962A3D7C).
One reason for this “alarmist” trend
is that there are some very real and large problems out there. But often, such
languages is employed because it is the only way to attract attention – or for
other reasons. Only by predicting disaster on a grand scale can one hope to be
listened to. But those who use dystopian visions alone are changing political
life in important and negative ways.
The most important consequence of
dystopian language is that it often represents an implicit defense of the
status quo. Utopian writers often call for wholesale transformations, but
dystopian ones often focus on a single issue, be it ecology or immigration or
sexual mores, and act as if, once that is addressed, everything else will take
care of itself.
That is why some national leaders
specialize in the use of dystopias: they get their followers to focus on one
issue while the leaders act in ways that are at variance with the interests of
those people in a variety of others. In short, dystopian language all too often
has become a classic bait-and-switch tactic.
And as a result, those who employ
dystopian language often ensure that existing dystopias continue rather than
being addressed.
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