Characteristics of a Dystopian World
Vocabulary
The Dystopian Protagonist
Vocabulary
Characteristics of a Dystopian World
100

What is worshipped by the people of the society?

A leader or concept. 

100
Define: control

the power to direct, manage, or limit people or situations.

100

What is a protagonist?

The main character. 

100

Define: flawed

having a weakness, mistake, or problem; not perfect

100

Who is under constant surveillance?

The people. 

200
How is a dystopia related to a utopia? 

A utopia is a place that is ideally perfect in relation to politics, laws, customs, and conditions. However, sometimes in striving for perfection they create injustice and suffering (a dystopia). Therefore, they criticise society and how people wanting to control everything can have the opposite effect. 

200

Define: apocalyptic

describing massive destruction or the end of the world

200

How does the protagonist feel?

trapped and is struggling to escape

200

Define: illusion

something that appears real but is actually false or misleading

200

How do people feel about the outside world?

They fear it. 

300

Name all THREE things that are restricted in a dystopian world. 

information

independent thought

freedom

300

Define: oppression

cruel or unfair treatment by those in power

300

What is the protagonist questioning?

the existing social and political systems

300

Define: desolate

empty, lonely, or in ruins

300

What is propaganda?

information, especially of a biased or misleading nature, used to promote a particular cause, doctrine, or point of view.


400

Why do dystopian worlds make individuality and fighting back a bad thing? 

Dystopian worlds are built around controlling society - individuality and fighting back would disruptive oppressing and control. 

400

Define: dissent

to openly disagree with an idea, rule, or authority

400

Why would the protagonist feel something is wrong in their society?

Because it is a dystopia and they realise that it is causing them/ others problems due to its systems, control and oppression. 

400

Define: speculative

based on guessing or imagining what might happen, rather than on proven facts

400

What could be an example of an uniform expectation people must conform to in a dystopian world? 

Many examples (e.g. mandatory government news watching, mandatory body camera wearing etc.) 

500

Why would a dystopian world benefit from the natural world being banished or distrusted? 

Man made environments are easier to control and dystopian worlds are all about control and artificial systems. 
500

Define: authoritarian

having strict control and expecting people to obey without question

500

How does the audience connect with the protagonist?

The protagonist helps the audience to recognise the negative aspects of the dystopian world through his or her perspective

500

Define: totalitarian

a system where the government has total control over people’s lives, with little or no freedom

500

What is a dehumanised state? 

Dehumanisation involves seeing certain groups as inhuman or subhuman, so undeserving of equal treatment.

Therefore, a dehumanised state is one where people are not treated as human beings often meaning they are not valued as individuals, given limited rights or treated as less than others. 

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