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Anti-leisure in dystopian fiction: the literature of leisure in the worst of all possible worlds
12
Citations
10
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2000
Year
Literary TheoryPerfect SocietyLeisure StudyDystopian FictionPossible WorldsComparative LiteratureLiterary CriticismSocial InjusticeCommodificationLanguage StudiesDystopian LiteratureLiterary StudyTheatrePoeticsLiterary UtopiasLiterary HistoryLeisure StudiesArtsModernity
Literary utopias, i.e. designs for the theoretically perfect society, have been common in Western literature since Plato's The Republic . A variation on this genre which emerged in the nineteenth century is the anti-utopia, or dystopia, in which an author depicts the worst of all possible societies. Dystopias usually exaggerate contemporary social trends and in doing so, offer serious social criticism. This essay examines the treatment of leisure in four widely-read dystopian novels. The leisure described in these novels we call anti-leisure. It is not leisure's opposite, work, but leisure perverted to achieve the perpetuation of tyranny. Such leisure regulates identity, prevents individual thought, impedes self-sufficiency, encourages immoderation, and distracts citizens from social injustice through various compulsory activities. Such novels encourage the re-examination of theories of leisure from a humanistic standpoint.
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