How to recognize a dystopia - Alex Gendler

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Published 2016-11-15
View full lesson: ed.ted.com/lessons/how-to-recognize-a-dystopia-ale…

The genre of dystopia – the ‘not good place’– has captured the imaginations of artists and audiences alike for centuries. But why do we bother with all this pessimism? Alex Gendler explains how dystopias act as cautionary tales – not about some particular government or technology, but the very idea that humanity can be molded into an ideal shape.

Lesson by Alex Gendler, animation by TED-Ed.

All Comments (21)
  • @kairuihu5977
    I thought the title said "How to recognize a dyslexia", than I realized it actually said "how to recognize a dystopia", than I realized that this is probably how you recognize a dyslexia.
  • The fact that every dystopia is someone's utopia both fascinates and horrifies me at the same time
  • @colmil5
    Whoever does the animation on these videos needs a raise
  • @clary6511
    I love reading dystopian books because they often represent problems we have in our society but exaggeratedly and I think that such as the people in the stories change their worlds we should improve ours too (just preferably not as a revolution like in those books)
  • @Jules-mt1xz
    The utopia of some is the dystopia of others.
  • @TheBaaz07
    this narrator's voice is beautiful. Dear Ted if youre listening, please, never lose this guy.
  • @malup1117
    To me, a “utopia” on earth feels scary. If everything is perfect, what do we work toward?
  • I read the Gulliver's Travels when I was 14. I thought it to be a children's book and it never striked me to be a dystopia or a satire... The older I'm the more comlicated my life is getting! :')
  • @giderahwolf
    Father taught me, "Utopia and Dystopia are the same thing. It's called Utopia on paper, and Dystopia, when you make it real." The older I am, the more I understand that.
  • @popalupa4844
    Basically, what I got from this is that it is impossible for humanity to achieve perfection.
  • @satnamo
    Love others as I love my self— That is all we need to make a paradise on earth because people are so good at making others suffer.
  • @colelevel2654
    "Flatland: A Romance Of Many Dimensions" is an underrated book I would consider a dystopia. It's about shapes living in a 2d world, with class structures based on how many sides a shape has, and throughout the story a square finds out about the third dimension and the other flatlanders refuse to believe him or that there's anything outside of their world. It's scarily accurate to today's society for a book written in 1884.
  • Damn, school seems pointless when you can just watch this channel all day
  • @kadius9251
    “How to recognise a dystopia” Looks out the window Yeah, I reckon we’re just about there...
  • @iLikeCrabrangoons
    Dystopia is my favorite genre to read. I love a well crafted idea that looks so nice and shiny on the outside and the deeper you dig the more horrifying it becomes.
  • "Death solves all problems— no man, no problems" –Anatoly Rybakov "It's a funny world we live in" –Joker
  • The ending when he described how achieving a utopia would create a dystopia shook me. And how calm he sounded made it worse