kindkit: John Constantine dreaming of the end of the world (Hellblazer: Constantine dreams the apoca)
[personal profile] kindkit
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?

Date: 2012-08-06 09:01 pm (UTC)
kangeiko: (Default)
From: [personal profile] kangeiko
I see your point... But the UK has had a history of worry over a slow slide towards totalitarianism - Mosley and his fascists were loathed, and the links to the aristocracy and the Tories do still make people wary of how nasty those in power can be. I agree, there isn't as much of a focus on nationhood, but the shows you're talking about would have been made by people raised in an empire, not a nation, so their perspective would have been different. That would also have tied in to the whole anxiety and crisis of selfhood, the worry of what England is/would be without an empire. I agree that the US had the Communist scares, but that is a fear of being infiltrated, a fifth columnist, rather than an anxiety over a complete loss of identity. I'm phrasing this badly. :/

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