LITR 5439 Genre, Movement, Style

Summer 2013 1st 5-wks session
M-T-Th 3-6pm
Bayou 1439

Literary & Historical

 Utopias

Homepage & Syllabus
Model
Assignments
Research  Readings Prof. White's homepage

URL: http://coursesite.uhcl.edu/HSH/Whitec/LITR/5439utopia

2011 Utopias syllabus

Instructor: Craig White  Office: Bayou 2529-7    
Phone
: 281 283 3380  Email: whiteC@uhcl.edu

Office Hours: M & Th, 12-1, 6-6:30, and by appointment

undergrad course summer 2013:  Literature of the Future meets 9-12 M, T, Th

Course texts

Thomas More, Utopia (1516)

Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Herland (1915)

Ayn Rand, Anthem (1938)

Ernest Callenbach, Ecotopia (1975)

Margaret Atwood, Oryx and Crake (2004)

Edward Bellamy, Looking Backward, 2000-1887 (1887) (background text)

Genesis, Revelation, & Book of Acts (BCE > 1st century AD/CE)

Plato's Republic & Golden Age myths

selections from other classical, multicultural, & postmodern texts   

Student Assignments

midterm (24 June)

research posts (2 + review in final; due 15-16 June; end of session)

final exam (end of session)

Seminar presentations

discussion-starter for reading assignments

web reviews / presentations mostly on historical utopias

Model Assignment highlights from previous midterms, research posts, or final exams

final grade report note on grading class participation course policies

Terms & Handouts

Utopia has historical and literary meaning:

historical utopia = an experimental community intended to reform or escape from normal human society, often by substituting planning, cooperation, or collective values and practices in place of laissez-faire, competition, and individualism; a.k.a. "intentional community"

literary utopia = a novel or fiction representing life and characters in such a community

“Utopia” comes from Thomas More’s Utopia (1516). More coined the word from Greek parts, either

ou (no) + topos (place, as in “topography”) to mean “no place”

or

eu (good, as in “euphoria”) + topos (place) to mean “good place”

Variations: Dystopia = society opposite from a utopia, or a utopia gone dysfunctional. (“Any utopia is someone else's dystopia.”)

Ecotopia = Ecological Utopia, a community whose collective social health imitates nature’s interconnectivity—from Ecotopia, 1975 novel by Ernest Callenbach. (X)

Millennium, apocalypse, or End-Times is often associated with utopian narratives, as when the Book of Revelation ends in heaven.

Utopian Communities and Texts (list)

Utopian Fiction & Experimental Communities in North America / USA (chronology)

Standard features / conventions of utopian / dystopian literature

Counter-Utopian (or anti-utopian) Tradition

Utopian motives

Introduction to Genres

list of genres

Index to Terms

Literature of Ideas

Decline or progress?

Objectives

Objective 1. Utopian Genre

1a. How to define the literary genre of “utopias?” What are this genre's standard conventions or features? What attractions and detractions? What audiences are attracted or put off?

  • Utopian text as hybrid of novel (journey, dialogue, adventure, escape) and essay or tract (instruction / information, persuasion / propaganda, ethics / values, application).

  • Utopias as hybrid of fiction and history, imagination and experience, idealism and reality.

1b. What genres join with or branch from utopia? Examples: dystopia, ecotopia, Socratic dialogue, science fiction, speculative fiction, fantasy, novel / romance, adventure / travel narrative, journalism, tract, propaganda, satire. Others?

  • How interdependent are utopia and dystopia? (e.g., “Anyone's utopia is someone else's dystopia.”)

1c. Can utopias join science fiction, speculative fiction, and allied genres in a “literature of ideas?”

  • Can knowledge of utopian literature be applied to texts that are not exclusively utopian or dystopian?

1d. To identify the utopian author both within and beyond traditional literary categories—e.g., as writer + activist, agitator, reformer, prophet / visionary?

1e. Utopian aesthetics: How does Utopian Fiction rebalance literature's classical purpose to entertain and educate? Is utopian / dystopian literature more interesting to talk about than to read?

Objective 2. Utopian Narratives

2a. What narrative action rises from or fits the description of an ideal or dystopian community?—e. g., journey, dialogue, exploration, learning, liberation, conversion?

2b. What problems rise from a utopian story that minimizes conflict and maximizes equality and harmony? What genre variations derive from these problems with plot?

2c. What tensions between the author’s description of a social theory and the reader’s and author's need for a story?

2d. How essential is “millennialism” (apocalyptic or end-time event) to the utopian narrative?

2e. Does dialogue or dialectic of learning replace the traditional narrative of emergence, pursuit, love, revenge, etc.? 

Objective 3. Historical / Cultural Objectives

Obj. 3 To get over the routine dismissal of utopias—"they don't work," “never happened,” or “castles in the sky”—and instead regard utopias as literary and historical experiments essential to Western Civilization and education.

3a.To review historical, nonfiction attempts by “communes,” “intentional communities,” nations, or cults to institutionalize or practice utopian ideals. What relations are there between fictional and actual utopian communities? What has been the historical impact of utopian fictions? Do utopian forms mirror and confirm social norms or oppose them?

3b. Are utopian impulses limited to socialism and communism, or may freemarket capitalism and democracy also express themselves in utopian terms and visions? Is utopia “progressive / liberal” or “reactionary / conservative?” What relations between “self and other (us and them) are modeled? Does the utopian society model itself on past, present, or future? Does a utopia stop time, as with the millennial rapture or an achievement of perfection? Or can utopias change, evolve, and adapt to the changes of history?

3c. What social structures, units, or identities does utopia expose or frustrate?

  • Social units or structures: person/individual/self, gender, sex, family [nuclear or extended], community, village/town/city, class, ethnicity, farm, region, tribe, clan, union, nation, ecosystem, planet, etc.

  • How may utopian studies shift the usual American arguments over race, sex, faith, and gender to cultural and socio-economic class?

3d. How seriously to evaluate gender roles and standards of sexual and love relationships in utopian communities? How do these differ from or resemble traditional norms? How essential are such changes to their intended transformation of society?

  • What changes result in child-rearing, feeding, marriage, aging, sexuality, etc.?

3e. Since our major texts are set in North America, how do Americans regard utopias? What problems do the Founding and recent history of the USA present for utopian discussion? For example: socialism or communism, the Cold War and collapse of Stalinist-Maoist Communism; discussing alternative economic, reproductive, or child-rearing policies, the ascendance of religious and freemarket fundamentalism or American culture's stress on the family?)

  • Why do American school curricula emphasize dystopic fiction (Nineteen Eighty-Four, Brave New World, The Giver) over utopian fiction?

3f. Are utopias limited to Western Civilization, rationalism, and social engineering, or may they exemplify multiculturalism?

  • Is the utopian impulse universal or specific only to Western culture or civilization?

  • If utopias or millennia are detected in non-Western texts or traditions, are such terms appropriate, or do we simply project our identities and values on cultures that are in fact doing something else altogether?

Objective 4. Interdisciplinary Objectives

4a. What academic subjects or disciplines are involved with utopian studies? Examples: literature, history, sociology, economics, architecture, urban planning?

4b. How may utopian or millennial studies serve as an interdisciplinary subject of study? What strengths and weaknesses result from this status? (Comparable interdisciplinary subjects include women’s studies, gender studies, ethnic studies [e. g., African American studies, whiteness studies], future studies, millennialism.)

4c. Do some interdisciplinary subjects underprivilege multiculturalism? Do utopian studies privilege western civilization?

4c. Is “utopia” too simple and singular a word or concept for the variety of phenomena it describes? Conversely, what does utopia reveal about an author’s or culture’s cosmology or worldview, as well as cosmogonies or origin / creation stories?

4d. How do literature and literacy appear in utopian or dystopian cultures? Include computer literacy: What is a “virtual utopia” in science fiction and technology? How has utopian speculation, communication, and organization adapted to the Web? Does the Web itself assume utopian or millennial attributes? Can virtual reality appear utopian while actual reality becomes dystopian?

Objective 5. Instructional Objectives

5a. How may a seminar classroom serve as a microcosm, model, or alternative for American culture? How does use of web instruction alter social dynamics?

5b. What does utopian / dystopian literature instruct us about education?

5c. What difficulties does utopian instruction typically present? 

  • Preventing discussions from stalling on "Utopias don't work" or "Why are we talking about this?" (Utopian communities fail, but some people keep attempting or learning from utopias.)

  • Why do American curricula emphasize dystopias?

  • Since utopian studies offers so many non-literary subjects, how much to limit the discussion to literature or expand to interdisciplinary or social / political concerns?

5d. Can new sections of courses build on previous sections' accomplishments?

5e. Recurring conflicts in teaching literature: form or content? liberal or conservative ideology? Can studies of utopian literature confront these questions or conflicts more directly or dialectically?

 

Summer 2013 shedule

Monday, 3 June 

Readings: Genesis & Revelation; Acts

The Golden Age

Plato's Republic

Discussion: Identify yourself and educational / career interests; what previous knowledge or reading of utopian / dystopian literature? Or related genres?

Agenda:

welcome, syllabus, website
review assignments, texts
self-introductions
ID cards
[break]
research posts
classical & scriptural utopias
Tuesday assignments & presenters
preview Utopia

Tuesday, 4 June

Readings: Thomas More, Utopia (1516)—read through book 1 & start book 2

Discussion starter for Book 1: Kristine Vermillion

Web review: Thomas More sites : Ruth McDonald

Web review: Twin Oaks: Mari Caylor

Agenda: assignments, preview, presentations

Web: Ruthi

Discussion: Kristine

Web: Mari

Assignments: Warning about Utopia: tedious reading, but clear and rewarding—"earned classic": could spend longer with it but may not want to

Work through Book 1 however you can and help each other out in discussion Tuesday.

Instructor's question: How does or doesn't Utopia resemble a novel? (Broadly, the "modern English novel" would not appear for app. 200 more years—DeFoe's Robinson Crusoe 1719).

As the novelistic passages are brief and dispersed, what other reading pleasures? Where does interest quicken or slacken, and why? What aspects of a novel are missing, and what happens instead?

What if any evidence of More as a Christian Humanist?

Historical background to More's Utopia (1516): Printing press developed 1450s (e.g., Gutenberg Bibles)—More's traveler makes references to Utopians learning printing from European visitors (2.32)
*Discovery of America 1492—More makes direct references to travels and writings of Amerigo Vespucci (1.1e)
*Renaissance (1400s-1500s) revives humanistic and empirical thought from Classical Greece and Rome, joining European emphasis on divine revelation and tradition from Middle Ages
*Rise of modern "power politics," formalized in Machiavelli's The Prince (1513, 1532)—Utopia, especially in its emphasis on "If I were advising a leader," often seems like a reply to The Prince that differs by emphasizing a need for leaders to be humble, virtuous models rather than power players; compare also to Plato's education of philosopher-kings in The Republic.

Thursday, 6 June

Readings: complete Thomas More, Utopia (1516); begin C. P. Gilman, Herland, chs. 1-2.

Discussion starter for Book Two of Utopia: Dan Stuart

Discussion starter for Herland, chs. 1-2: instructor

Model Assignment highlights (research posts): Jacob McCleese

Instructor's presentation: B. F. Skinner, Walden Two (1948) + Los Horcones

Agenda: genres, assignments

highlights: Jacob

Utopia bk 2: Dan

motivating utopia: pageantry (2.40), spectacle, emulation; property and family

[break]

begin Herland + Bakhtin; action

conventions: journey, gardens, uniforms, irony / satire, 

Walden Two + (objs. 1a, 4a) 

Discussion Questions:

Utopia: 1. What problems with characterization does utopian fiction generate? What balance of fictional entertainment and social instruction? What parts work best? What drives you crazy? What does the report leave out?

2. What conventions or set-pieces typify the utopian genre? One possibility: origin story when Utopus separates the island from the mainland.

3. Utopia's most threatening reforms may be abolition of private property, and reshaping of family relations. Are these two proposals related? Is family a form of property?

4. What textual evidence of More as a Christian Humanist?

Herland: 1. What aspects of the novel or fiction are immediately evident?

2. Describe Gilman's prose style—what advances in utopian fiction as fiction?

3. How is Gilman's style still limited by utopian conventions in characterization, viewpoint?

4. What advantages to telling the story from men's perspective? Satire? (an allied genre—e.g., maybe More's Utopia was satirical?)

Monday, 10 June

Readings: Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Herland (complete)

Handout: "Charlotte Perkins Gilman," Handbook to American Women's History

Discussion starter: Ruthi McDonald ETT Best of History Websites: Progressive Era

Web review: Charlotte Perkins Gilman sites; Feminist / Women's Utopias: Hannah Wells

Agenda: research posts

web: Hannah

assignments

disc: Ruth

literature in literary utopias

labor-credits in Walden Two & Twin Oaks;

property / family as private 7.30, 8.97, 7.82, 9.57 > Woman on the Edge of Time

utopian motives

Discussion Questions:

1. What conventions of utopian fiction continue? Describe Gilman's prose style—what advances in utopian fiction as fiction?

2. How is Gilman's style limited by utopian conventions in characterization, viewpoint, even content? Specifically, the visiting men are far more individualized than the more admirable women: what learn about utopian and fictional characterization? Also, how convincing are the domestic or sexual relations? Written in 1915, so what limits to representation?

3. What advantages to telling the story from men's perspective? Satire?

4. Associate Gilman and Herland with the Progressive Era, periods of progress as spawning utopias?

5. Ch.4 describes literature produced by the utopia itself—what misgivings? Compare "Berrian's novels" in Looking Backward, ch. 15. (Instructor will direct.) 3.43; 4.69-4.70, 5.3. 9.46-9 (cf. Equiano 1.3), 9.58, 9.66

6. Herland appears in 1915, a half-century after Darwin's Origin of Species (1859). How does Darwinian or evolutionary thought appear in both the men's and women's attitudes and behavior—e.g., the advent of Parthenogenesis, the women's centuries-long cultivation or breeding, the men's defense of modern American economy as "Social Darwinism," in which an unregulated freemarket creates class struggle & "survival of the fittest."

6a. How may Darwinian utopias be compatible with Behaviorist utopias?

Tuesday, 11 June

Readings: Anthem, chapters 1-2

Discussion starter: Hannah Wells

Web review: Jane Addams: instructor (more on Progressive Era? > New Deal?)

Model Assignment highlights (research posts): Munira Omari

Agenda: MLA bibliography (Modern Language Association)

research post assignment, discussion & highlights: Munira

Web: Addams

Anthem discussion: Hannah

genre conventions of utopia / dystopia

origin stories: Utopia 2.1, Looking Backward 4.4, 5.4, 19.18; Anthem 1.9, 2.49

Herland: Further discussion?

Background: As literary genre, Anthem is not a utopia but a dystopia, but the two terms remain co-dependent.

Discussion Questions:  1. compare / contrast Anthem to utopian texts. How are utopias & dystopias co-dependent for identity?

2. What automatic appeals or "readability" do dystopian texts offer over utopian texts, at least for a modern or American audience? (e.g. romance narrative)

3. While Rand's status in the literary canon is controversial, Anthem offers some strong if limited literary appeals. How may we characterize Rand's style? What appeals to fundamentalist freemarket capitalism +- evangelicalism?

4. What do utopian texts scant or blur that Rand develops? What consciousness does she demonstrate of utopian texts and structures? (Obviously she hates them, but her text shows occasional knowledge of utopian forms.) 1.28

5. Resemblance to other early-mid 20c dystopias or satirical utopias like Brave New World, Nineteen Eighty-Four, Animal Farm, Lord of the Flies? What resemblances or differences relative to teen dystopias, zombie apocalypse, etc.

Thursday, 13 June

Readings: Anthem (complete)

Discussion starter: Michael Luna (Do American curricula emphasize dystopias? Why? What literary and ideological appeals?)

Web reviewYoung Adult Dystopias: Amy Sasser

Web review: Ayn Rand biography, institutes, ideology: Dan Stuart

 

Agenda: Research Posts: readability

Web: Amy

Literature of Ideas

discussion: Michael

Web: Dan

 

Discussion Questions:

1. Conclusion to Anthem: does it expose some upsides to utopia?

2. How does Prometheus's new home resemble modern suburbia or exurbia? How would you like Prometheus for a neighbor? Can "planned communities" be related to utopias or intentional communities? (Obj. 3b)

3. Among many ideological issues raised by Rand's writing, what do you make of a woman writer who exalts patriarchy? How rationalize “I” always being “he”? Is Golden One / Gaea a real character or more like a mythic symbol? Since Anthem is a woman-authored text, how deal with masculine privilege and womanly devotion? Is "Man" for humanity a period-style, or does it really mean man? (Compare and contrast Herland.)

4. Why do Americans and American schools emphasize dystopias or satirical utopias?

 

First research post due weekend of 15-16 June

Monday, 17 June

Readings: begin Ecotopia pp. 1-17 (up to "Food, Sewage, & 'Stable States'")

Discussion starter: Michael Luna

Web review: Celebration USA: Munira Omari

Instructor's Presentation: 60s-70s Utopias, esp. Marge Piercy, Woman on the Edge of Time (1976)

Standard features / conventions of utopian / dystopian literature > midterm

Agenda: research posts review / midterm / assignments

web: Munira

Ecotopia: Michael

60s-70s utopia

Discussion Questions: 1. How does Ecotopia immediately connect to our other utopian texts as a representative of the genre?

2. How to define the literary genre of “utopias?” What conventions repeatedly appear? What audiences are involved or excluded?

3. What genres join with or branch from utopia? Examples: dystopia, ecotopia, Socratic dialogue, science fiction, fantasy, novel / romance, adventure / travel narrative, journalism, tract, propaganda, satire. Others?

4. In the entertainment / instruction balance, how well does Ecotopia work as entertaining fiction as opposed to didactic literature?

Tuesday, 18 June

Readings: continue Ecotopia (through p. 59, up to "In Ecotopia's Big Woods")

Discussion starter(s): Dan Stuart

Web review: Suburbs as Utopia / Dystopia: Kristine Vermillion

Model Assignment highlights (midterm essays): Michael Luna (instructor will do web highlights)

Instructor's Presentation: Walter Bellamy, Looking Backward; research sites on Bellamy

Agenda:

Kristine: suburbs

Assignments, midterm > Michael

Ecotopia discussion: Dan

Looking Backward: instructor 

Discussion Questions: 1. Standard features / conventions of utopian / dystopian literature: Everyone responsible for identifying one utopian convention (or variation) in Ecotopia, or #2 below.

2. Re obj. 1 on hybrid novel / tract, how well does Ecotopia use both genres? Compare to earlier utopian texts for character, sexuality, narrative-dialogue mix.

3. How is Ecotopia "dated?"—i.e., an earnest but naive expression of 60s-70s consciousness? What remains impressive? What surprises?

4. Callenbach varies the utopian narrative by combining Weston's learning about Ecotopia with sexual learning or initiation. How convincing is this use of sexuality for narrative and social structure? Does it help characterization, or is it just embarrassing and hippie?

4a. How does Weston's sexual instruction / learning resemble that of the men in Herland?

5. Observe social mores in Ecotopia, esp. its "public" nature: compare utopias' reduction or transformation of private property and private family?

Thursday, 20 June

Readings: complete Ecotopia

Discussion starter(s): Jacob McCleese

Web review: reviews, interviews re Margaret Atwood, Oryx & Crake, Year of the Flood: Mari Caylor

Instructor reviews: Utopian Fiction & Experimental Communities in North America / USA, Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations

Agenda:

assignments, midterm: Michael?

conclude Ecotopia: Jacob

final exam preview

preview Atwood: Mari 

founding documents +- utopia

Discussion Questions:

1. In the final episodes of Weston's initiation, can the Ecotopians' behavior be compared to that of a cult? What difference between a commune and a cult?

2. How effective is the coordination of Weston's love story with Marissa and the narrative of his ideological initiation?

3. As visual description, the novel's best passages may be the competitive games as opportunity for aggression-expression, + mystical healing associated with highly sexualized society. Discuss.

4. How multicultural is Ecotopia? Or any utopia? Does the "Soul City" description seem as tacked-on to you as to me?

5. Ecotopian literature: "Ecotopian novels . .    . security, almost like 19c English novels; world is decent, satisfactory, sustaining despite some difficulties . . . . At first the stories seemed puzzlingly vapid to me. I couldn’t figure out why anybody would find them interesting . . . How come they didn't have that exciting nightmare quality? Some of them even have happy endings. . . . After a while, they seem more like life—okay to spend time with, reassuring. Come to think of it, Ecotopia itself is beginning to feel a good deal more reassuring: when I needed care, I was taken care of."

Monday, 24 June: midterm assignment (instructor holds office hours during class period; email midterm due by noon Tuesday, 25 June)  

Tuesday, 25 June

Readings: begin Oryx and Crake (chs. 1-2, through p. 33)

Discussion starter(s):  Mari Caylor

Web review: 19th-Century American Utopias: Munira Omari

Instructor reviews: utopian elements in founding documents of Western Civ. & USA: Plato’s Republic, USA founding documents, Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations

Agenda: Midterms status, assignments

begin instructor prsn; utopian USA

O & C: Mari

questions?

19c utopias: Munira

more founding utopias 

Thursday, 27 June

Readings: continue Oryx and Crake (through ch. 6, p. 144) + “In Utopia”: Modern-day adventures in utopian living. interview of J. C. Hallman, author of In Utopia, 15 August 2010 (The Big Sort )

Discussion starter(s):  Ruthi McDonald (concentrate on obj. 1b?)

Web review: Kibbutzim of Israel: Kristine Vermillion

Instructor's Presentation: African American dystopias / utopias incl. Morrison's Paradise

Agenda: midterms & finals

Web: Kristine

begin discussion: Ruthi

break + evaluations

continue discussion: Ruthi?

African American utopias / dystopias


Oryx

Discussion Questions for 25, 27 June, 1 July:

1. Genre(s): As the novel opens, what genre or genres appear to be operative? (Obj. 1: speculative fiction, science fiction, utopia / dystopia, satire?) How does the novel immediately indicate it is a novel and not merely another precise specimen of utopian fiction? As a novel, how much is any utopian or dystopian passage rendered ironical by the presence of differing passages or voices? (cf. Bakhtin on dialogic of novel)

  • How does speculative fiction either distinguish itself from or join with other genres? What advantages or points-of-diminishing-returns for classifying genres or introducing new genre labels like "speculative fiction?"

2. Style: For a serious writer who is widely respected and taught in higher education, Atwood's prose style is surprisingly accessible or readable. How does her writing reconcile being intellectually challenging but fluent and compelling to a wider audience? If a partial answer is her novels' socio-political relevance, how does Atwood's writing avoid automatic categorization as ideology or propaganda? Consider literary features, e.g., intertextuality, allusion, metaphor.

  • Contrast with pedestrian-formulaic style of pop science fiction. How does Atwood create a compelling character like Jimmy / Snowman or Crake instead of stock stereotypes (e.g., in science fiction, "the competent man"). Is the intelligence of Jimmy's character consistent enough to be realistic?

  • Atwood frequently resorts to olfactory or smell images. Relate to humans as mammals, or other purposes?

3. Content: How does Atwood criticize corporate capitalism realistically instead of hysterically? (Too direct a criticism of the natural order marginalizes voice, + novel ironizes even criticism.)

Religion in fiction may appear less as a supreme voice than as one of many voices or worldviews whose interplay generates creation of a social world. How does religion (or the "sacrilege" of "playing God" through bio-engineering) appear in the novel, with what degree of authority?


Rednecked Crake


Thicknee

Monday, 1 July: 

Readings: Oryx and Crake complete?

Instructor's Presentation: Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash (1992); Dennis Danvers's Circuit of Heaven (1998)

Standard features / conventions of utopian / dystopian literature

science fiction

Agenda: midterms, research post, final exam updates

science fiction, utopian conventions

discussion questions

Year of the Flood preview

Virtual Utopias

next time: more satire

Tuesday, 2 July: final exam (final exam and 2nd research post due by email before or by noon Saturday 6 July), or send either or both earlier. 

No regular class meeting. Instructor holds office hours.

Thursday, 4 July: no meeting—Independence Day holiday 

Utopia, Texas

(named in anticipation of a utopian project, cancelled after failure of La Reunion near Dallas)

Dr. White's publication & presentations on utopian, millennial literature

“A Utopia of `Spheres and Sympathies’: Science and Society in Hawthorne’s The Blithedale Romance and at Brook Farm.” Utopian Studies 9.2 (1998): 78-102.

"Cross-Cultural Apocalypse in the Contact Generation of Native America and New England." Fourth Annual Conference of the Center and Society for Millennial Studies, Boston University, November 1999.

"`A Patterne and Copie to Imitate': John Eliot's Christian Commonwealth and the `Praying Towns' of Native America." Conference of the Society of Utopian Studies, Montreal, November 1998.

"Brook Farm, Fourier, and the City of Lights: Utopia and Revolution in Hawthorne's Blithedale Romance." Session on Nineteenth-Century America, Society for Utopian Studies conference, Toronto, 19 October 1995.

"One Text, Three Worlds: A Narrative of Cosmological Transformation in Hawthorne's Blithedale Romance." Dissertators' Symposium, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 19 April 1991.

2011 Utopias syllabus

syllabus 2009

syllabus 2007

syllabus 2005

syllabus LITR 5733 Seminar in American Culture: Utopias (1995)

Presentations / web reviews for possible addition to syllabus:

Instructor's Presentation: Ursula K. Le Guin, The Dispossessed: An Ambiguous Utopia (1974)

Ernest Callenbach's website

utopian authors

Instructor's Presentation: Brook Farm (1840s) / Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Blithedale Romance (1852)

Instructor's Presentation: Lois Lowry, The Giver (1993)

Our texts within Western and American history:

text

historical period

historical tradition /
economic trend

More, Utopia (1516) European Renaissance / Reformation; exploration & settlement of New World America as site of Eden; communal Native America as precontact ecotopia
Bellamy, Looking Backward (1888) late 19th century, "Gilded Age" industrialization, urbanization, plutocracy of limited government, freemarket economics controlled by "Robber Barons" and "Captains of Industry"; gaps b/w rich and poor; high rates of immigration
Gilman, Herland (1915) early 1900s, Progressive Era (associated with Pres. Theodore Roosevelt) labor laws, scientific government and social work, woman's suffrage, environmental conservation and protection, industrial regulation; progressive income taxes
Rand, Anthem (1938) mid-1900s, New Deal & Fair Deal (Franklin Roosevelt & Harry Truman) peak of socialist-oriented government in USA; restricted immigration, government guarantees of social welfare (e. g., Social Security) + Cold War with negative totalitarian utopias of Soviet Union and Communist China
Callenbach, Ecotopia (1975) 1960s-70s, liberal politics & social wealth (Civil Rights, Great Society safety net, war on poverty, hippies) extension of New Deal to minorities; liberalization of immigration laws; peace movements; youth culture > adverse reaction by wealth & traditional values

articles for potential inclusion on syllabus

Yves Charles Zarka, "The Meaning of Utopia" 2011

Michael Lind, "Stop Pretending Cyberspace Exists," Salon.Com 12 Feb. 2013

Mike Konczal, "Thinking Utopian: How about a universal basic income?" Washington Post 11 May 2013.

notes for later offerings

suburbs as utopia / private-public identity

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