: Explores group psychology, the "crowd," and how fear functions as a foundational social emotion.

This section examines the psychological and cultural roots of dystopian thought.

The book defines dystopia as a "spectrum of sociability" dominated by fear, paranoia, and the demonisation of "enemies," serving as the psychological and social counterpart to utopia’s ideal of enhanced friendship.

The work is structured into three distinct parts that bridge the gap between historical reality and fictional narratives.

A historical analysis of real-world "dystopian moments" in the 20th century.

: Traces the development of totalitarianism from the French Revolution's Jacobinism to the rise of Stalinism.

: Surveys major despotic regimes, including Nazi Germany, the Chinese Cultural Revolution, and Cambodia, through the lens of "political religion". Part III: The Literary Revolt against Collectivism An examination of how the genre evolved in literature.

is a comprehensive 2017 monograph by historian Gregory Claeys that explores the concept of dystopia across three main areas: intellectual theory, historical totalitarian regimes, and literary traditions.

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