This week’s world building assignment brought up a lot of
questions. So many, in fact, it took a while to narrow our group’s focus to a
centralized tone and idea for our new world. Our what-if question, the thing
that started all our speculation, was this: “What if there was only one world
continent?” This is a pretty specific concept, but it was surprising how many
possibilities stemmed from such a simple question. We had to consider how such
a world might come into being, whether what we built would take place in the
past or the future, and we decided on a future idea, inspired by scientists’
predictions of continental drift. We found a really great source for this here.
That provided all the geographical inspiration for Caitlin’s map. From there,
we veered in a kind of dystopian direction influenced in some part by the tone
of “Panem” in the Hunger Games. This thought, where we focused on the future
and a kind of science fiction style of world, was further supported by the
ideas from our reading of “Design Fiction” this week, which talked about where
design fiction appeared most and was the most successful, particularly in the
conclusion. It also discussed how design is the expression of an idea. We were
able to integrate that into the world that we created. The idea is in the
question, what if the modern world became one land mass? World building is integral to science
fiction, and therefore it was a great medium to take inspiration from. We felt
that the world becoming smaller and closer together would have an opposite
effect culturally--nations would feel more threatened by each other and would
draw away, possibly scared of losing their own identity. That fear would
encourage less cooperation and more paranoia. This was the tone and feeling
behind our ideas about border control, found in Chad’s newspaper, which would
be a huge concern in a world where all borders touched. It also contributed to
Julia’s black propaganda posters demeaning mixed-race people. When cultures are
colliding and mixing, as demonstrated in the map and in some the country
changes therein, they would tend to feel fearful about losing that culture.
Such concerns would not only be cultural, but also practical. Diseases and
weapons would be much more serious, and much more difficult to escape. Hailey
showed this in a really interestingly commercial way with her advertisement for
fashionable medical masks, a wise idea in a society with no water separating
outbreaks, an era with no buffers. In exploring a darker, more insular world, we found that fear and claustrophobia is a potential challenge to human development, a concern perhaps even relevant in today's world, as the world gets smaller and smaller, if not on a physical level, then in every other way.





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