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Utopia, Ltd.: Ideologies For Social Dreaming In England 1870-1900: Historical Materialism, Volume 7

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Utopia, Ltd.: Ideologies For Social Dreaming In England 1870-1900: Historical Materialism, Volume 7

Contributors:

By (Author) Matthew Beaumont

ISBN:

9781608460212

Publisher:

Haymarket Books

Imprint:

Haymarket Books

Publication Date:

9th November 2009

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Dewey:

823.809372

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

214

Dimensions:

Width 152mm, Height 229mm

Weight:

355g

Description

This book uncovers the historical preconditions for the explosive revival of utopian literature at the nineteenth-century fin de sicle, and excavates its ideological content. It marks a contribution not only to the literary and cultural history of the late-Victorian period, and to the expanding field of utopian studies, but to the development of a Marxist critique of utopianism. The book is particularly concerned with three kinds of political utopia or anti-utopia, those of 'state socialism', feminism, and anti-communism (the characteristic expression of this last example being the cacotopia). After an extensive contextual account of the politics of utopia in late-nineteenth century England, it devotes a chapter to each of these topics before developing an original reinterpretation of William Morris's seminal Marxist utopia, News from Nowhere.

About the Author

Matthew Beaumont, D. Phil. (2000) in English Literature at the University of Oxford, is Lecturer in Nineteenth-Century Literature at University College London'

Reviews

Utopia Ltd. is remarkable for its detailed historical grasp of the late-nineteenth century. Beaumont operates at a high conceptual level, demonstrating a sophisitcated understanding of Marxist cultural theory, which is most effectively put to use as an explanatory framework. There is much impressvely original work here, both in terms of ideas and in the bringing to light of hitherto little-discussed texts. There is also a good balance between original research on the one hand, and, on the other, a fresh approach to more canonical works such as Morris's News from Nowhere. The book is full of illuminating insights, lucidly and coherently argued.'

Terry Eagleton, Professor of Cultural Theory and John Rylands Fellow, University of Manchester.

'This is a very convincing, often original, and lucidly written reading of late-nineteenth century utopian literature that makes a fine contribution to the ever-growing field of fin-de-sicle studies.'

Sally Ledger, Professor of Nineteenth-Century Literature, Birkbeck College, University of London.

'Utopia Ltd. presents us with a new constellation of the field under inquiry, or as one of Beaumont's masters of thought, Benjamin, would say with a dialectical image which on the one hand makes some common features of late-nineteenth century utopian literature stand out, and on the other does not neglect the single stars. I recommend it warmly.'

Darko Suvin, Emeritus Professor of English and Comparitive Literature, McGill University.

'What I find particularly valuable about this book is the way in which it provides a new framework for understanding well-known texts such as Bellamy's Looking Backward, and especially Morris's News from Nowhere, by situating them in relation to the large output of utopian and "cacatopian" literature produced in the late nineteenth century. This phenomenon is an ideological episode worthy of attention in its own right, as a symptom of the widely-perceived crisis of bourgeois culture around the fin de sicle, and Beaumont does a convincing job of explaining it, thereby making it interesting to the reader. But I suspect that many on the left will be drawn to this study by the way it helps us towards a fuller understanding of Morris's News from Nowhere and issues around Marxist utopianism.'

Andrew Hemingway, Professor of Art History, University College, London

Reviews

'Utopia Ltd." is remarkable for its detailed historical grasp of the late-nineteenth century. Beaumont operates at a high conceptual level, demonstrating a sophisitcated understanding of Marxist cultural theory, which is most effectively put to use as an explanatory framework. There is much impressvely original work here, both in terms of ideas and in the bringing to light of hitherto little-discussed texts. There is also a good balance between original research on the one hand, and, on the other, a fresh approach to more canonical works such as Morris's News from Nowhere." The book is full of illuminating insights, lucidly and coherently argued.'
Terry Eagleton, Professor of Cultural Theory and John Rylands Fellow, University of Manchester.
'"This is a very convincing, often original, and lucidly written reading of late-nineteenth century utopian literature that makes a fine contribution to the ever-growing field of fin-de-sihcle "studies.'
Sally Ledger, Reader in Nineteenth-Century Literature, Birkbeck College, University of London.
'Utopia Ltd. "presents us with a new constellation of the field under inquiry, or -- as one of Beaumont's masters of thought, Benjamin, would say -- with a dialectical image which on the one hand makes some common features of late-nineteenth century utopian literature stand out, and on the other does not neglect the single stars. I recommend it warmly.'
Darko Suvin, Emeritus Professor of English and Comparitive Literature, McGill University.
'"What I find particularly valuable about this book is the way in which it provides a new framework for understanding well-known texts such as Bellamy's Looking Backward," and especially Morris's Newsfrom Nowhere," by situating them in relation to the large output of utopian and "cacatopian" literature produced in the late nineteenth century. This phenomenon is an ideological episode worthy of attention in its own right, as a symptom of the widely-perceived crisis of bourgeois culture around the fin de sihcle," and Beaumont does a convincing job of explaining it, thereby making it interesting to the reader. But I suspect that many on the left will be drawn to this study by the way it helps us towards a fuller understanding of Morris's News from Nowhere "and issues around Marxist utopianism.'
Andrew Hemingway, Professor of Art History, University College, London.

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