Section | Semester | Instructor | Time | Location | Course Areas |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2 | Spring 2006 | Starr, George A.
Starr, George |
MW 4-5:30 | 221 Wheeler |
More, T.: Utopia; Scott, S.: A Description of Millenium Hall; photocopied selections from Godwin, W.: Political Justice; Malthus, T. R.: Treatise on Population; Owen, R.: A New View of Society; Engels, F.: The Condition of the Working Class in England; Marx, K.: The Communist Manifesto; Butler, S.: Erewhon or Over the Range; Jefferies, R.: After London or Wild England; Bellamy, E.: Looking Backward; Morris, W.: News from Nowhere; Wells, H. G.: The Time Machine, When the Sleeper Wakes; Orwell, G.: 1984; Atwood, M.: The Handmaid?s Tale. Several films, such as Metropolis and Blade Runner, will also be used.
"Most Utopian authors are more concerned with selling readers on the social or political merits of their schemes than with the ""merely"" literary qualities of their writing. Although some Utopian writing has succeeded in the sense of making converts, and inspiring some readers to try to realize the ideal society, most has had limited practical impact, yet has managed to provoke readers in various ways?for instance, as a kind of imaginative fiction that comments on ""things as they are"" only indirectly, with fantasy and satire in varying doses. Among the critical questions posed by such material are the problematic status of fiction that is not primarily mimetic, but written in the service of some ulterior purpose; the shifting relationships between what is and what authors think might be or ought to be; how to create the new and strange other than by recombining the old and familiar; and so on. The reading list will certainly include anti-Utopian as well as Utopian works, and may include some writings by Malthus, Owen, Engels and Marx that do not present themselves as flights of fancy. Required writing will consist of a single 15-20-page term paper. Depending on enrollment, each student will be responsible for organizing and leading class discussion (probably teamed with another student) once during the semester. There will be no quizzes or exams, but seminar attendance and participation will be expected, and will affect grades.
Note: Although this class will usually meet during the scheduled hours (4-5:30), students wishing to be admitted should know that in the latter part of the semester, films will sometimes be shown, such as ?Metropolis,? that will run to or past 6 p.m. "