Entry tags:
British TV dystopias
I'm intrigued by the fact that series with the premise "in the future, our country is a quasi-fascist dystopia" are common enough on British TV, especially in the 1970s and 1980s, that you could call them a sub-genre. (I've just started watching one such show, The Guardians, which so far is excellent.) By contrast, I can't think of single example of this premise on US television, from that period or in fact ever.
Cultural difference? Or am I just not remembering US examples?
Cultural difference? Or am I just not remembering US examples?
no subject
I'm not sure I'd argue that civil liberties in the UK before 2001 were all that much healthier than in the US (the Prevention of Terrorism Act and Section 28 spring immediately to mind), nor that people were as aware of and opposed to such laws as one might hope. US political culture has made an enormous and terrifying lurch towards right-wing authoritarianism since then, though. But I agree that the dominant US culture has at least since WWII been shaped by an uncritical patriotism, in fact a nearly messianic sense of national specialness and mission.