The Racial Horizon of Utopia

The Racial Horizon of Utopia

Author: Edward K. Chan

Publisher: Ralahine Utopian Studies

Published: 2016

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9783034319164

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This book surveys reimaginings of race by US American utopian novelists including Dorothy Bryant, Marge Piercy, Samuel Delany, Octavia Butler and Kim Stanley Robinson. It argues that our utopian dreams cannot be furthered unless we come to terms with the phenomenology of race and the impasse of the individual in liberal humanist democracy.


Race and Utopian Desire in American Literature and Society

Race and Utopian Desire in American Literature and Society

Author: Patricia Ventura

Publisher: Springer Nature

Published: 2019-10-12

Total Pages: 311

ISBN-13: 3030194701

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Bringing together a variety of scholarly voices, this book argues for the necessity of understanding the important role literature plays in crystallizing the ideologies of the oppressed, while exploring the necessarily racialized character of utopian thought in American culture and society. Utopia in everyday usage designates an idealized fantasy place, but within the interdisciplinary field of utopian studies, the term often describes the worldviews of non-dominant groups when they challenge the ruling order. In a time when white supremacy is reasserting itself in the US and around the world, there is a growing need to understand the vital relationship between race and utopia as a resource for resistance. Utopian literature opens up that relationship by envisioning and negotiating the prospect of a better future while acknowledging the brutal past. The collection fills a critical gap in both literary studies, which has largely ignored the issue of race and utopia, and utopian studies, which has said too little about race.


Cruising Utopia

Cruising Utopia

Author: José Esteban Muñoz

Publisher: NYU Press

Published: 2009-11-30

Total Pages: 244

ISBN-13: 0814757286

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The Year 2100

The Year 2100

Author: Kyu Hwang

Publisher: Trafford Publishing

Published: 2012-08

Total Pages: 653

ISBN-13: 1466928603

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The book is a hybrid of fiction and projection, comprehensively including predictions on the future world. Fictional parts of the novel used to vividly portray fictitious figures carrying out national policy to impact on the world order. The prevalent land grab in the Third World now will develop into putting a whole nation on sale if a fortune will be offered to the citizens of target country. Thus, China will use its immense foreign currency reserve to annex a small country like Solomon Islands in the beginning stage, and then expand further into Eurasia. Likewise, other world powers will expand territories by the will of incorporated citizens. In result, political map of the world will differ much from current world. And rivalry in Asia will ignite spread of nuclear arsenals to satisfy their national pride but deep economic integration within the continent will set aside Cold War mentality for mutual prosperity. The gloomy prospect of food & energy will exacerbate the anxiety of contemporaries until awakened leading countries devoting to reverse the nightmare. After the mid-21st century, the haunting effects of climate change and peak oil will capitulate to the ingenuity and will of people, thereby next generation will access closely to a utopian world.


Black Utopia

Black Utopia

Author: Alex Zamalin

Publisher: Columbia University Press

Published: 2019-08-20

Total Pages: 151

ISBN-13: 0231547250

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Within the history of African American struggle against racist oppression that often verges on dystopia, a hidden tradition has depicted a transfigured world. Daring to speculate on a future beyond white supremacy, black utopian artists and thinkers offer powerful visions of ways of being that are built on radical concepts of justice and freedom. They imagine a new black citizen who would inhabit a world that soars above all existing notions of the possible. In Black Utopia, Alex Zamalin offers a groundbreaking examination of African American visions of social transformation and their counterutopian counterparts. Considering figures associated with racial separatism, postracialism, anticolonialism, Pan-Africanism, and Afrofuturism, he argues that the black utopian tradition continues to challenge American political thought and culture. Black Utopia spans black nationalist visions of an ideal Africa, the fiction of W. E. B. Du Bois, and Sun Ra’s cosmic mythology of alien abduction. Zamalin casts Samuel R. Delany and Octavia E. Butler as political theorists and reflects on the antiutopian challenges of George S. Schuyler and Richard Wright. Their thought proves that utopianism, rather than being politically immature or dangerous, can invigorate political imagination. Both an inspiring intellectual history and a critique of present power relations, this book suggests that, with democracy under siege across the globe, the black utopian tradition may be our best hope for combating injustice.


Aye, and Gomorrah

Aye, and Gomorrah

Author: Samuel R. Delany

Publisher: Vintage

Published: 2003-04-08

Total Pages: 402

ISBN-13: 0375706712

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A father must come to terms with his son's death in the war. In Venice an architecture student commits a crime of passion. A white southern airport loader tries to do a favor for a black northern child. The ordinary stuff of ordinary fiction--but with a difference! These tales take place twenty-five, fifty, a hundred-fifty years from now, when men and women have been given gills to labor under the sea. Huge repair stations patrol the cables carrying power to the ends of the earth. Telepathic and precocious children so passionately yearn to visit distant galaxies that they'll kill to go. Brilliantly crafted, beautifully written, these are Samuel Delany's award-winning stories, like no others before or since.


The Golden Book of Springfield

The Golden Book of Springfield

Author: Vachel Lindsay

Publisher: DigiCat

Published: 2022-08-15

Total Pages: 219

ISBN-13:

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DigiCat Publishing presents to you this special edition of "The Golden Book of Springfield" by Vachel Lindsay. DigiCat Publishing considers every written word to be a legacy of humankind. Every DigiCat book has been carefully reproduced for republishing in a new modern format. The books are available in print, as well as ebooks. DigiCat hopes you will treat this work with the acknowledgment and passion it deserves as a classic of world literature.


Rethinking Utopia

Rethinking Utopia

Author: David M. Bell

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2017-01-20

Total Pages: 305

ISBN-13: 1317486706

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Over five hundred years since it was named, utopia remains a vital concept for understanding and challenging the world(s) we inhabit, even in – or rather because of – the condition of ‘post-utopianism’ that supposedly permeates them. In Rethinking Utopia David M. Bell offers a diagnosis of the present through the lens of utopia and then, by rethinking the concept through engagement with utopian studies, a variety of ‘radical’ theories and the need for decolonizing praxis, shows how utopianism might work within, against and beyond that which exists in order to provide us with hope for a better future. He proposes paying a ‘subversive fidelity’ to utopia, in which its three constituent terms: ‘good’ (eu), ‘place’ (topos), and ‘no’ (ou) are rethought to assert the importance of immanent, affective relations. The volume engages with a variety of practices and forms to articulate such a utopianism, including popular education/critical pedagogy; musical improvisation; and utopian literature. The problems as well as the possibilities of this utopianism are explored, although the problems are often revealed to be possibilities, provided they are subject to material challenge. Rethinking Utopia offers a way of thinking about (and perhaps realising) utopia that helps overcome some of the binary oppositions structuring much thinking about the topic. It allows utopia to be thought in terms of place and process; affirmation and negation; and the real and the not-yet. It engages with the spatial and affective turns in the social sciences without ever uncritically being subsumed by them; and seeks to make connections to indigenous cosmologies. It is a cautious, careful, critical work punctuated by both pessimism and hope; and a refusal to accept the finality of this or any world.


Utopias in Unlikely Places

Utopias in Unlikely Places

Author: Jennifer Cuffman

Publisher:

Published: 2022

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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In recent years, a few overlapping questions have percolated in the interdisciplinary field of utopian studies: what is the value of utopia in dark, dystopian times; and what is the usefulness of utopia (as a place, literary genre, and theoretical framework) for racial imaginaries? I argue that, to reckon with these questions, the literary utopia needs to be interrogated, for colonialist epistemologies are woven into the very texture of the genre. Instead of merely including non- white and non-Western authors within the existing framework of utopia, the introductory chapter argues for the necessity of a new framework for the literary utopia as a way of disentangling the genre from colonialist epistemologies and hierarchies of humanness. I define utopia as a no- good-place, drawing from David Bell’s framework, and read Alexis Pauline Gumbs’ Spill: Scenes of Black Feminist Fugitivity for the way the way its worlds of freedom and liberation amid capture reshape frameworks and potentialities of the literary utopia. Chapter 1 builds onto the introduction’s conversations of Black feminist utopias and Black women’s writing by focusing on Toni Cade Bambara’s The Salt Eaters. Chapter 2 attends most closely to the spatial conventions of the literary utopia as a way of reimagining utopia’s 'topos' in a way that does not reproduce colonial logics of place and hierarchies of humanness. I turn to Tropic of Orange by Karen Tei Yamashita—an Asian American writer—for its portrayal of a cross-ethnic and cross- racial utopia that offers an alternative to dominant spatial logics. Chapter 3 reads The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Díaz—a Dominican American writer—for its portrayal of utopianism for those living in the wake of slavery. This utopianism is not based in a dream of a better future, but, rather, it moves sideways in the present. All three of these texts offer utopias or utopianisms that don’t look or feel like they should. These imagined utopias—centering racialized characters who have been dispossessed of the future and are living in the wake of slavery, colonialism, and imperialism—are non-linear, move sideways, aren’t always hopeful, and can be heard and felt more than seen. But all of them imagine and build radically different worlds in the present.


A Century of Genocide

A Century of Genocide

Author: Eric D. Weitz

Publisher: Princeton University Press

Published: 2015-04-27

Total Pages: 381

ISBN-13: 1400866227

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Why did the twentieth century witness unprecedented organized genocide? Can we learn why genocide is perpetrated by comparing different cases of genocide? Is the Holocaust unique, or does it share causes and features with other cases of state-sponsored mass murder? Can genocide be prevented? Blending gripping narrative with trenchant analysis, Eric Weitz investigates four of the twentieth century's major eruptions of genocide: the Soviet Union under Stalin, Nazi Germany, Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge, and the former Yugoslavia. Drawing on historical sources as well as trial records, memoirs, novels, and poems, Weitz explains the prevalence of genocide in the twentieth century--and shows how and why it became so systematic and deadly. Weitz depicts the searing brutality of each genocide and traces its origins back to those most powerful categories of the modern world: race and nation. He demonstrates how, in each of the cases, a strong state pursuing utopia promoted a particular mix of extreme national and racial ideologies. In moments of intense crisis, these states targeted certain national and racial groups, believing that only the annihilation of these "enemies" would enable the dominant group to flourish. And in each instance, large segments of the population were enticed to join in the often ritualistic actions that destroyed their neighbors. This book offers some of the most absorbing accounts ever written of the population purges forever associated with the names Stalin, Hitler, Pol Pot, and Milosevic. A controversial and richly textured comparison of these four modern cases, it identifies the social and political forces that produce genocide.