Utopias
A Brief History from Ancient Writings to Virtual Communities
Blackwell Brief Histories of Religion

April 2012
304 Seiten, Hardcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
This brief history connects the past and present of utopian
thought, from the first utopias in ancient Greece, right up to
present day visions of cyberspace communities and paradise.
* Explores the purpose of utopias, what they reveal about the
societies who conceive them, and how utopias have changed over the
centuries
* Unique in including both non-Western and Western visions of
utopia
* Explores the many forms utopias have taken - prophecies
and oratory, writings, political movements, world's fairs, physical
communities - and also discusses high-tech and cyberspace
visions for the first time
* The first book to analyze the implicitly utopian dimensions of
reform crusades like Technocracy of the 1930s and Modernization
Theory of the 1950s, and the laptop classroom initiatives of recent
years
Introduction 1
1 The Nature of Utopias 5
Utopias Defined 5
Utopias Differ from both Millenarian Movements and Science
Fiction 8
Utopias' Spiritual Qualities are Akin to those of Formal
Religions 9
Utopias'Real Goal: Not Prediction of the Future but Improvement
of the Present 12
How and When Utopias are Expected to be Established 13
2 The Variety of Utopias 16
The Global Nature of Utopias: Utopias are Predominantly but not
Exclusively Western 16
The Several Genres of Utopianism: Prophecies and Oratory,
Political Movements, Communities, Writings, World's Fairs,
Cyberspace 24
3 The European Utopias and Utopians and Their Critics
47
The Pioneering European Visionaries and Their Basic Beliefs:
Plato's Republic and More's Utopia 47
Forging the Connections Between Science, Technology, and Utopia
50
The Pansophists 53
The Prophets of Progress: Condorcet, Saint-Simon, and Comte
55
Dissenters from the Ideology of Unadulterated Scientific and
Technological Progress: Thomas Carlyle, John Ruskin, and William
Morris 58
The Expansive Visions of Robert Owen and Charles Fourier 60
The "Scientific"Socialism of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels
66
4 The American Utopias and Utopians and Their Critics
74
America as Utopia: Potential and Fulfillment 74
The Pioneering American Visionaries and their Basic Beliefs in
America as Land of Opportunity: John Adolphus Etzler, Thomas
Ewbank, and Mary Griffith 78
America as "Second Creation": Enthusiasm and Disillusionment
81
5 Growing Expectations of Realizing Utopia in the United
States and Europe 89
Later American Technological Utopians: John Macnie Through
Harold Loeb 89
Utopia Within Sight: The American Technocracy Crusade 96
Utopia Within Reach: "The Best and the
Brightest"--Post-World War II Science and Technology Policy in
the United States and Western Europe and the Triumph of the Social
Sciences 99
On Misreading Frankenstein: How Scientific and Technological
Advances have Changed Traditional Criticisms of Utopianism in the
Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries 123
6 Utopia Reconsidered 139
The Growing Retreat from Space Exploration and Other
Megaprojects 139
Nuclear Power: Its Rise, Fall, and Possible Revival--Maine
Yankee as a Case Study 142
The Declining Belief in Inventors, Engineers, and Scientists as
Heroes; in Experts as Unbiased; and in Science and Technology as
Social Panaceas 157
Contemporary Prophets for Profit: The Rise and Partial Fall of
Professional Forecasters 160
Post-colonial Critiques of Western Science and Technology as
Measures of "Progress"169
7 The Resurgence of Utopianism 186
The Major Contemporary Utopians and Their Basic Beliefs 186
Social Media: Utopia at One's Fingertips 193
Recent and Contemporary Utopian Communities 194
The Star Trek Empire: Science Fiction Becomes Less Escapist
199
Edutopia: George Lucas and Others 203
The Fate of Books and Newspapers: Utopian and Dystopian
Aspirations 217
8 The Future of Utopias and Utopianism 234
The "Scientific and Technological Plateau"and the Redefinition
of Progress 234
Conclusion: Why Utopia Still Matters Today and Tomorrow 241
Further Reading 261
Index 269
"In the capable hands of Howard P. Segal, professor of history at the University of Maine, technology rightfully has an important role in the imagination of alternative societies. His concise, well-written book covers utopias ancient and modern, Western and non-Western, and it is not limited to fiction conventionally labeled utopian but includes world's fairs, social science, digital media, prophecies, millennial movements, and science fiction." (Technology and Culture, 1 October 2015)
"To conclude: Segal's book on utopias is a well-made treatise on an important aspect of European and American history. He convincingly shows that utopias had a political, as well as an economic, relevance. The view on the interaction between different cultural systems, such as art, politics, religion, technology, and economics, is a great strength of the book. It shows how complex processes around utopian visions have been, and how relevant they are for the implementation and change of different cultural spheres." (Religion, 30 May 2015)
"This text provides a unique approach for teaching history and the history of science. Highly recommended. General readers; lower-division undergraduates and above. (Choice, 1 February 2013)
"Segal brings considerable scholarship and experience to bear, particularly on the historical intersections between technology and utopia ... [He] covers several continents and many centuries, addressing key texts and thinkers ... [and] supplies impressive coverage and thoughtful interpretations." (Times Higher Education, 12 July 2012)
"A 'near perfect' account of utopias and utopian thinking of the
past, present, and future. Historian Howard Segal revisits utopian
ideologies revealing their perennial appeal, their use and misuse
of technology, and their considerable power to reshape society,
then and now."
--James Rodger Fleming, Colby College
"An expansive, entertaining and provocative introduction to
utopianism and its practitioners ... Utopias captures both the
whimsical extravagance as well as the earnestness of attempts
(western as well as non-western) to imagine better futures and then
actually create better societies across the ages ... [It] is bound
to stimulate thought on the subject, and will appeal to a wide
readership."
--Greg Claeys, University of London
"Segal offers a focus on 'western' expressions of utopianism
while devoting substantial space to diversity. Hence we find the
expected discussions of literature from More to Bellamy and Wells
and beyond ... but there are also interesting examinations of
utopias from China, Japan, India, and Latin America; and
subsections on World's Fairs, professional forecasters, cyberspace,
Megaprojects, social media, E-books, and George Lucas's
Edutopia."
--Kenneth M. Roemer, University of Texas at
Arlington
"The potential for good of science and technology, and their
manifest dangers and pitfalls, are vividly evoked by Segal in his
accessible account of utopias past and present. This is a work of
insight and reflection."
--Barbara Goodwin, University of East Anglia
University of Maine, where he has taught since 1986. He received
his M.A. and Ph.D. from Princeton University. His previous books
include Technological Utopianism in American Culture
(1985), Future Imperfect: The Mixed Blessings of
Technology in America (1994), Technology in America: A Brief
History (1989, 1999, with Alan Marcus), and Recasting the
Machine Age: Henry Ford's Village Industries (2005). He also
reviews for, among other publications, Nature and the Times Higher
Education.