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In reply to the discussion: Huxley vs Orwell who got it right? Comix [View all]Nitram
(24,611 posts)78. Another excellent dystopian novel was...
...The Space Merchants by Pohl and Kornbluth that was first published in 1952. Among other things, it featured vending machines that sold three items with addictive additives. Advertising conditioned the public to crave a smoke after you ate the candy bar, and a soft drink after the smoke, which in turn led to a craving for the candy bar - creating a vicious cycle of consumption.
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it was an extension of his "anti-totalitarianism"--which of course is what McCarthyism
MisterP
Nov 2015
#83
Both are right, 1984 is not really speculative fiction, it is allegorical reporting on 1948 and
Bluenorthwest
Nov 2015
#6
Huxley's truth is primordial; Orwell's truth exploits and builds on it, imo.
Joe Chi Minh
Nov 2015
#12
Ah, the question that will not die: Huxley or Orwell? The correct answer is Burgess. nt
merrily
Nov 2015
#52
Bradbury and Fahrenheit 451 are often forgotten in these comparisons, and he was just as prescient.
rwsanders
Nov 2015
#63
Dick had the most briliantly paranoid and dystopian imagination of any SF writer, but...
Nitram
Nov 2015
#79