back to list

Through A Mirror Darkly

Banes at 12:00AM, Sept. 2, 2021
likes!


Star Trek: A Piece of the Action

So this could be considered Part Three of my loose-knit series on science fiction: The Distorted Society.

This is a sci-fi convention where there is an Earth…or another planet, at least somewhat Earth-like, that has some aspect of society that is a distorted version of our own.

Just being an alien planet does not fit into this trope; this is about an Earth (or a ‘sort-of-Earth’) that has a certain element of our society exaggerated, magnified or distorted).

Several episodes of Star Trek explored this kind of thing - there would be a Nazi-planet. Or a 1930's gangster-planet.

The Twilight Zone had a couple of these too, exploring various kinds of authoritarian societies on alternate Earths.

Sliders was an entire series based on the idea of characters who jumped (or ‘slid’, I suppose) to alternated versions of Earth where there would often be this kind of setting to deal with: there would be an Earth where the traditional gender roles were reversed, for example. I'm sure there were others; not every episode did this kind of distorted society but this series was built for that type of thing! A great premise that didn't totally deliver, I think because of various behind the scenes problems.

The Purge is a movie (or a few movies) built around this kind of thing: one day per year, nothing is illegal. I haven't seen it and it appears to be sort of a horror movie or thriller I think, but it qualifies here.

Shirley Jackson's short story “The Lottery” was a famous example, featuring a small town that has a sinister tradition of a grim…you guessed it…lottery!


Black Mirror: Nosedive

The Black Mirror episode “Nosedive” was a fantastic story, I thought, perfectly told about a society where every interaction between people was followed by each person “rating” the other person. People's socioeconomic status depended on positive ratings from others. The main character is obsessed with raising her status and…well, I won't spoil what happens. It's kind of in the title. It gets the highest recommendation from me though - well worth a look if you haven't seen it!

Social media is excellent fodder for these kinds of sci fi stories actually - I think there have been a couple movies that explored different aspects of it. The Orville did an episode where citizens voted on criminals' guilt or innocent, judging strangers based on social media-type presentations. It was okay, but it was no “Nosedive”. On the same show, Bortis is from a society/species made up entirely of males and there are some interesting episodes about that character and his planet.

The “twisted mirror” version of Earth can make for a fascinating science fiction story, and of course, a way to create ham-fisted allegories as well (I'm lookin' at you, Elysium!)

What do you think of the “distorted society” story in science fiction? I think my favorite was “Nosedive” from Black Mirror. How about you?


Have a good one!

Banes

comment

anonymous?

Furwerk studio at 12:42PM, Sept. 2, 2021

There is kind of term called Raygun Gothic, which was coined by William Gibson in his story "Gernsback Continuum", that takes Art deco, Streamline Moderne and retro futurism of the 1950's, an example is the pre-bombs America of Fallout. I am working on my own setting that basically apes that, which I all Radiator Gothic, a setting where the 1980's never really "stopped", and I don't mean the pastel and hair metal style but the urban rot found in movies like Toxic Avenger, Robocop and Videodrome. The feel of "concrete meanness" found in many urban areas like Baltimore, only stretched out across the country.

bravo1102 at 2:41AM, Sept. 2, 2021

There have been so many twisted vision in history one doesn't have to imagine much. One way to world build a twisted culture is simply to ask "if this goes on..." with nearly any current event. Remember the Mirror universe in ST:TOS was a combination of previous empires and empires can be self-perpetuating or rise and fall in a lifetime. It can be the centuries of Rome, Persia and China or the lifespan of an Alexander or a Tamerlane.

Gunwallace at 1:41AM, Sept. 2, 2021

@dpat57: Yeah, Trek did the Mirror Universe well, and every female character was a vamp with a rose in one hand and a dagger in the other. It'd be a fun 'world' to be in, but I'm sure I wouldn't last long. Most dystopian fiction is just a version of this concept. As is utopian fiction for that matter. "One man's meat is another man's poison."

dpat57 at 12:33AM, Sept. 2, 2021

Any mirror universe that's ruled by a cruel wicked witch type in a shiny catsuit (who would use me for bendy toy sex) gets my vote, so Trek is ahead of the competition here. *raises his glass to Major Kira* I can appreciate your choices, though original Trek's Mirror, Mirror episode with bearded Spock and his agonizer, which was a complete shock to viewers at the time, no pun, is hard to beat.


Forgot Password
©2011 WOWIO, Inc. All Rights Reserved Mastodon