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The Cambridge Companion to American Utopian Literature and Culture since 1945

The Cambridge Companion to American Utopian Literature and Culture since 1945

The Cambridge Companion to American Utopian Literature and Culture since 1945

Sherryl Vint, University of California, Riverside
May 2024
Paperback
9781009180054

    Providing a comprehensive overview of American thought in the period following World War II, after which the US became a global military and economic leader, this book explores the origins of American utopianism and provides a trenchant critique from the point of view of those left out of the hegemonic ideal. Centring the voices of those oppressed by or omitted from the consumerist American Dream, this book celebrates alternative ways of thinking about how to create a better world through daily practices of generosity, justice, and care. The chapters collected here emphasize utopianism as a practice of social transformation, not as a literary genre depicting a putatively perfect society, and urgently make the case for why we need utopian thought today. With chapters on climate change, economic justice, technology, and more, alongside chapters exploring utopian traditions outside Western frameworks, this book opens a new discussion in utopian thought and theory.

    • Provides an overview of utopian thinking in the period since America took on a global role following the end of World War II
    • Charts a diverse range of ways of thinking about the utopian at this cultural moment, bringing into dialogue cultural traditions that have not been part of utopian studies
    • Reorients the idea of the utopian away from understanding it strictly as a literary genre, emphasizing ways that the utopia connects with real-world political struggle

    Product details

    May 2024
    Paperback
    9781009180054
    332 pages
    228 × 151 × 18 mm
    0.5kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • List of figures
    • List of contributors
    • Introduction: utopianism in dark times Sherryl Vint
    • 1. Pandemics and the lesson of history Priscilla Wald
    • 2. American futures Phillip E. Wegner
    • 3. Engendering utopia: the force of gender and the limits of feminism Jennifer A. Wagner-Lawlor
    • 4. America and/as white supremacy Edward K. Chan and Patricia Ventura
    • 5. American spirituality Andrew Tate
    • 6. Black escapes and Black wishlands Jerry Rafiki Jenkins
    • 7. Latinx belonging in new world borders: Mestiz@ rhetoric and critical utopian/dystopian dialectics of ambivalence Rubén R. Mendoza, Ph.D.
    • 8. Educating desire: young adult utopian fiction Jonathan Alexander
    • 9. Utopia after American hegemony Peter Boxall
    • 10. Technological fantasies Matthew Wolf-Meyer
    • 11. Utopian spaces Roger Luckhurst
    • 12. Environmentalism and ecotopias Gerry Canavan
    • 13. Economic justice Hugh C. O'Connell
    • 14. Renewing democracy Mathias Nilges
    • 15. The time of new histories: utopian possibility in America's twenty-first century John Rieder
    • Works Cited
    • Index.
      Contributors
    • Sherryl Vint, Priscilla Wald, Phillip E. Wegner, Jennifer A. Wagner-Lawlor, Edward K. Chan, Patricia Ventura, Andrew Tate, Jerry Rafiki Jenkins, Rubén R. Mendoza, Jonathan Alexander, Peter Boxall, Matthew Wolf-Meyer, Roger Luckhurst, Gerry Canavan, Hugh C. O'Connell, Mathias Nilges, John Rieder