@article{Massaad_2025, title={Sociolinguistics of Power and Identity in Dystopian Fiction}, volume={10}, url={http://dx.doi.org/10.22161/ijels.102.12}, DOI={10.22161/ijels.102.12}, abstractNote={This study explores the sociolinguistics of power, identity suppression, and resistance in dystopian fiction through a thematic analysis of 1984 by George Orwell, The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood, and Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury. By applying Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) and Foucauldian discourse theory, the research examines how authoritarian regimes in these texts manipulate language to control thought, suppress individuality, and maintain societal dominance. In 1984, the use of Newspeak illustrates how language can limit freedom of thought and enforce conformity, while in The Handmaid’s Tale, renaming and restricted literacy are used to suppress women’s identities. Fahrenheit 451 portrays censorship through destroying books and eliminating knowledge and independent thought. The study also investigates how language serves as a tool for resistance, as characters reclaim their autonomy through acts of writing, storytelling, and the preservation of forbidden literature. By aligning these findings with sociolinguistic and feminist linguistic theories, the study demonstrates that language in dystopian fiction functions as both an instrument of control and a means of challenging oppression. The research offers insights into how these fictional portrayals of linguistic manipulation reflect broader societal concerns about censorship, identity, and resistance in authoritarian contexts.}, number={2}, journal={International Journal of English Literature and Social Sciences}, publisher={AI Publications}, author={Massaad, Dr. Madoline}, year={2025}, pages={071–079} }