Dystopian have a wicked side to what believed to be their perfect society. The psychological
perspective of dystopian society, in a government controlling environment where strict and
controlling rules that demand to be followed by the societies. This rules and demand require
people in the society to obtain survival skill that will not let them get killed or tortured to death.
The people in this society are sometimes brained washed to believe they’re living the perfect life,
when in reality they know it all an irony. They try to relive past memories or dreams that can cover
they’re pain and suffrage, from their …show more content…
Some people can’t see beyond what
their true reality could be, instead of believing false claims of living the perfect life. Dystopian
in general, I believe have to do with some type of psychological perspective and of surviving even
tough if it pretending to follow the rules. In some societies, that are restricted to many humans
feeling and expression, psychologically there has to be something wrong with the leader and the
people that follow his decision, of becoming a perfect society, because there isn’t a society that
perfect there’s always some imperfection in between that give balance to people’s life. Instead of
following commands and orders that prohibit basic and self-human rights, people should not fall
into the idea that their misery is the only way of living. When people can’t decide for them self of
what they want in their society and can barely rebel is when the power they had is completely
taken away and dominated by one group, who takes every right they once had. …show more content…
When Wilson was
getting torture, he kind of jumped into a state of mind that wasn’t his reality. In the journal “From
Utopia to Dystopia: Levels of explanation and the politics of social psychology” it express how
democracy is seen as an illusion in an implicit dystopia (Klein, p. 91). That the “free man” and his
choice are false claims, that a society will be controlled regardless of any rights, because when
people get rights they’ll have no say or vote in the society anyways, it will take a long time for
them to achieve a vote that count (Klein, p. 91). This journal also argues that “social psychology
tends to pass on a political message: by showing that individual freedom is an illusion as it is either
limited by influence from others or by automatic and unconscious processes, it conveys an
inherently conservative dystopia (p. 97).” I agree with what Klein expresses that in a dystopia and
sometimes in reality individual freedom is sometimes an illusion, we are set to believe if it by other
or by our own unconscious. This expresses that sometimes people can influence our state of