Aaron Reynolds, Ph.D., Academic Advisor, The Honors College
Robert Liddell, Faculty, The Honors College
Is it just us, or are those depictions of far-off dystopias that we all grew up on (think 1984, The Terminator, Hunger Games, Idiocracy, The Last of Us, and many more) starting to feel, well, a bit *closer* to our current reality these days? Whether it’s the rise of AI, rampant misinformation, an ongoing epidemic, everyone glued to their phones, extreme weather events (and much, much more) it can certainly seem so. Where have these dystopian visions been correct about the world we live in now – and where has humanity (and technology?) proven to be even stranger, wilder, more depressing, more absurd – and maybe even more resilient? -- than we ever could have imagined? When the “nightmare future” simply becomes “now” – what lessons (and maybe even relief?) can we find in such stories as well?
Table participants are encouraged to share examples of dystopian literature and pop culture from their own experience – and real-world parallels, of course! — as we consider the decidedly non-utopian implications of the future in (possibly?) still-hopeful ways...