Ideological Imperialism in Three Dystopian Works
Imperialism used to be a lot bloodier than it is in modern times. The phalanxes of the ancient Greek armies used to move in a dreaded square, with men shield by shield, moving forward with spears raised toward their foe. Even when more successful conquerors such as the Babylonians, Persians and Romans went forth to war, they did so in a fashion that was hand-to-hand and brutal, carving their empires one foot at a time, right across the bodies of their opponents. While the CGI and other animation tricks at work in such modern films as 300 make the carnage seem more like a ...