Read Divergent Thinking Online
Authors: Leah Wilson
Which brings us to where things get uglyâto where groups become factions, and factions get scary.
THE UGLY: FACTIONS AND THEIR MANIPULATION AND USE
Earlier, I defined factions as smaller groups with common goals inside larger organizations. But there is a little bit more to it than that. Factions are usually formed in opposition to somethingâlike how the Divergent trilogy's factions are formed in opposition to things such as dishonesty and ignorance and violence. Except instead of just opposing certain ideas, most real-world factions form against groups of people. And when those factions are led by someone who has no problem justifying any means to attain their endsâwhether those ends match the greater faction's or notâthey can become deadly.
The trouble often starts when one group feels threatened, endangered, or believes that another group is in some way undermining theirs. If that happens, they may turn against the offending group. They may become a faction.
Prejudices are built on difference. That's not ideal, but it's hard to avoid, and as long as those different groups are equal in power, most people aren't really getting hurt. When two groups are forced to compete against each other for resources like money or powerâthe way Hitler claimed the “pure” Germans and Jews wereâthat's when they become factions. And when one faction winsâwhen one faction gains power over the otherâdifference becomes an excuse to prevent the other group from having the same opportunities and access to resources as the dominant group. The more powerful group's prejudice is institutionalized.
We see it in the Chicago experiment with the factionless. Faction members appear to live comfortable lives with plenty of food and readily available housing. The factionlessâthose who couldn't cut it in a factionâare not so lucky. They struggle to obtain enough to eat, much less clothes to wear and comfortable places to sleep, and no one in the factions does much about it; the Abnegation are the only ones who seem to care at all. The factionless are not just different from faction members, they're less worthy. Even though many of them have jobsâ“the work no one else wants to do” (
Divergent
)âthey don't get the same access to the city's resources as faction members do because they don't deserve it.
The situation outside the city is similar. In
Allegiant,
we are introduced to two new factions: GPs, or the genetically pure, and GDs, or the genetically damaged. The Bureau's subtle (in the compound) and not-so-subtle (in the fringe) treatment of GDs as inferior to GPs is yet another example of what happens when one group has power over another. GDs are told they are equals, yet they live every day with inequalities. A murder of a GD by a GP might be prosecuted as a case of manslaughter, if it's prosecuted at all. GDs are not allowed to move into positions of authority in the Bureau, included in decision-making, or allowed to have leadership rolesâthose are reserved for GPs. (Although the GD are allowed to be useful, people like Nita know they are considered second-class citizens and can never rise further than they already have.) And those GDs who live in the fringe lack as many services and rights as the factionless do in Chicago. Even the term used to describe them reflects the imbalance of power: they're not just genetically different, they're genetically damaged. The very name implies inferiority. No matter how supposedly scientific the evidence behind the Bureau's reasoning isâhuman nature made the separation between GP and GD a rift that eventually became a chasm.
To people like David, the GD are not fully human; they are merely damaged goods, or in the case of the GD living in Chicago, lab rats. Their memories, identities, and lives are expendable. As Tris puts it, they are “just containers of genetic materialâjust GDs, valuable for the corrected genes they pass on, and not for the brains in their heads or the hearts in their chests” (
Allegiant
).
Sadly, you don't have to look too far in our own society to see inequities among groups theoretically based on geneticsâthose between races and ethnicities. In fact, it was impossible for me to read about the genetically pure and damaged without thinking of how ethnicity and race are used as the basis of so many spoken and unspoken barriers in our world. It's way too easy to come up with examples of groups who wereâand still areâdiscriminated against, in ways both large and small: slaves and Native Americans in the United States, Aborigines in Australia, Roma in Europeâthe list goes on and on. But, since
In the Garden of Beasts
is on my mind, I have only to look as far as Nazi Germany to see the terrible places that kind of pure/impure thinking can lead. Hitler's stated purpose was to form a pure Aryan nation. (Reminiscent of David's genetically pure, isn't it?)
Often, such prejudices, and the reasoning they hinge on, simmer just under the surface. But an unscrupulous leader can bring these prejudices to a boil and manipulate them to meet his or her own needs.
You can see this at work in
Divergent
with Jeanine and the Erudite. Jeanine's fear of Abnegation revealing the Edith Prior video, which could lead to the dissolution of the faction system and a loss of power for her as faction leader, leads her to spread lies about Abnegation, saying that they are hoarding food and supplies, and slandering Tris' father and other Abnegation leaders with the goal of turning the other factions against them. She clearly convinced the Dauntless leadershipâand who knows how many more?
This was the same tactic used by Hitler against the Jews prior to, and throughout, World War II. Unlike Jeanine's devious undermining of Abnegation through rumors and innuendoes, Hitler was never subtle about his anti-Semitic rhetoric. His views that Jews hated the white race, stole from the Germans, became wealthy on the backs of working German people, etc., was initially spread via his autobiographical manifesto,
Mein Kampf,
and once in power, Hitler openly blamed the Jews for everything from Germany's loss of the World War I to 1929's German Depression. He tapped into Germans' dissatisfaction and their established prejudices against the Jews, and used it to build, then solidify, his own power.
It wasn't just the Jews. Whoever was deemed unsuitable (and Hitler's list was longâthe Roma, homosexuals, the disabled, certain religions . . .) was targeted, first through innuendo and rumor and then through laws like the “Aryan clause” in Germany's civil service laws, which banned Jews from holding government offices. And then there was the Gleichschaltung, or “Coordination,” which “[brought] citizens, government ministries, universities, and cultural and social institutions in line with National Socialist beliefs and attitudes” (
In the Garden of Beasts
). This was the Nazification of Germany, whereby all organizations (including religious, educational, and civic) were either brought in line with Nazi policies or became forbidden and were disbanded. Workers unions were dissolved, no other political parties were allowed, and there were compulsory organizations (such as Hitler Youth, Labor Service, and Young Maidens) that started in childhood and progressed to adulthood. If you were in (which was mandatory for all who qualified), there was no way out.
At the street level, the Coordination worked much like Erudite's smear campaign against Abnegation, or against the Divergent: spread evidence to support existing prejudices (the Stiffs were being greedy, hoarding resources the other factions needed; the Divergent were dangerous) and watch human nature take over.
In the Garden of Beasts
relates the “amorphous anxiety” that changed German lives “like a pale mist that slipped into every crevice . . . You began to think differently about whom you met for lunch . . . In the most casual of circumstances you spoke carefully and paid attention to those around you.” Fear of being identified with anything forbidden turned friends against friends, and families turned against their ownâmuch like Caleb turned against Tris.
Although Jeanine's attempted destruction of Abnegation is horrific, it is noteworthy that none of the other factions step up to defend Abnegation. Amity flat out refuses to help except as “a safe house for members of all factions” (
Insurgent
). Distracted by Jeanine's campaign against Abnegation, the factions lack the willingness, or foresight, to recognize that what happened to Abnegation could just as easily happen to them. And I can't help but compare this to the rest of the free world, which initially refused to censure or condemn Hitler's actions. World leaders stuck their collective heads in the sand until Hitler's atrocities could no longer be ignored.
Leaders like Jeanine and Hitler have been around since humankind began, as the founders of the experimental cities must have known. Why else would they have invented the memory serum to reset experiments gone bad? I doubt that the Bureau GP ever recognized in themselves the same cruel and self-serving actionsâthe same manipulation of others for their own ends, made justifiable by their prejudicesâthat they were using the memory serum to prevent. Certainly David didn't seem toâbefore Tris erased his memory.
ARE FACTIONS NECESSARY?
Of course, one way to prevent manipulative, self-serving leaders from exploiting factions' prejudices would be to get rid of factions altogether. As John Dickinson, one of America's founding fathers, wrote in 1768, “By uniting we stand, by dividing we fall.” Is there any reason not to try to prevent factions from forming in the first place?
Despite the Bureau's claim that Chicago is the most successful experimental city because of the factions, I think the factions were the biggest flaw in their design. Chicago may have lasted longer than the experiments without factions, but it, too, eventually falls apartâand no doubt would have sooner, without the Bureau's serum interventions.
Dividing people into groups, and then allowing those groups to evolve into egocentric entities whose members have little or no respect for anyone outside of the group, can only result in conflict and further separation between the groups. This is as true inside Chicago as it is outside it.
What's missing from the faction systemâwhat the faction system makes difficult, if not impossibleâis empathy for fellow humans. In order for a government to be successful, all factionsâwhether the Divergent trilogy's factions or those in our own worldâneed to work together, respecting the strengths and differences of each.
Integrationâgetting to know different people and exploring new thoughtsâis a key component in increasing respect and tolerance for others and the best chance of combatting the group-based prejudices we naturally tend toward. In the Divergent trilogy, there's no better example of integration than Tris. She's fearless, but her selfless Abnegation tendencies soften the harsh edges of Dauntless, and her Erudite intelligence gives her the ability to reason, question, and modify her beliefs even in the midst of life-threatening situations. In one respect, the Bureau was right about the Divergent being able to save them: the qualities that make Tris Divergent are the very ones her world needs most.
It's human nature to establish groups. Evelyn tells Tobias, “People always organize into groups. That's a fact of our existence” (
Allegiant
). Sympathetic natures attract us to each other. But in any successful group, it's the inclusion of and compassion for all its members that truly allow the group to flourish. When a group devolves into cliques and factions, it becomes disempowered. Had the Chicago experiment continued to appreciate the diversity and individual strengths of all the factions, it wouldn't have fallen apart. But fighting the baser human tendenciesâto aggrandize oneself and one's faction at the expense of othersâis a continual struggle.
A world tempered with empathy, kindness, and respect can only be achieved through vigilance, mindfulness, and close scrutiny of those in power. It's not easy, but nothing worth having is.
      Â
Julia Karr
is the author of two teen dystopian novels,
XVI
and its sequel,
Truth.
She lives in Bloomington, Indiana, with her cats, Frankenstein and Esmerelda. If she had to choose a faction she'd choose Amity, since her free time is spent keeping peace between the cats and tending her garden.