We are living in dystopian times. Perhaps we always have been. I am starting to think Revelation may have been the first dystopian novel. I have been trying to wrap my head around the whole "End of the World" genre.
Truly. Revelation. No, I do not believe in four headed beasts with tongues of fire any more than I believe in Klingons. Still I consider it a relevant work of dystopian fiction. Relevant in that the author, in and around all that Armageddon shit, spoke to the culture in the Mediterranean basin at the time. There were 'good guys' and 'bad guys.' I get the sense that had the author lived someplace other than Patmos, say Smyrna for example, the heros and villians would be cast differently.
We live in a time and place where the villians are defined for us by the media. Terrorists, Russians, immigrants; It depends on your news source really. In Iran we are called "The Great Satan." Russian leaders have been fond of calling us 'Imperialists.' The thing is, no one's description is totally wrong. They are all describing the Human Condition from different points of view.
The human condition, and civilization; the key to our situation can be found in both. Jane Goodall ruffled feathers in the animal behaviourist community by describing the culture of chimpanzees. Before her, the scientific community put humans apart from the animal world. (I really need to finish Origin of Species, as I have not yet gotten to much of what Darwin says about us.) Some of what Darwin has said, up to chapter four, supports the notion that we can examine our own behavior and abilities from examining closely related species. Chimps can be real assholes too.
Wife beacons. More later.
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