Literature & literary studies:

Economic Inequality

Utopian Explorations
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Description

«This relevant, clearly defined study isn’t constricted by its primary focus on late nineteenth-century American utopias, written when inequality flourished. Morris enriches this focus with chronological comparisons to well-known and lesser-known American utopias in other periods; international contexts from non-American authors; and interpretive perspectives by utopian specialists, political scientists, philosophers, and sociologists. But the book’s most striking quality is the variety of reforms identified and discussed. This variety greatly enhances our understanding of utopists’ war on inequality.» (Kenneth M. Roemer, Emeritus Fellow, University of Texas System Academy of Distinguished Teachers. Author of The Obsolete Necessity, Utopian Audiences, and (ed.) America as Utopia «Utopian alternatives to current, persistent and increasing inequality matter: as William Blake said, ‘What is now proved was once, only imagin’d’, and so Donald Morris examines a wealth of possibilities, some outlandish, but all conceivable, and many eminently feasible, from a tradition of literary and imaginative forms of political and social theory. A hopeful and invigorating read.» (Tom Boland, Senior Lecturer in Sociology, University College Cork) This work explores what utopian writers have said about economic inequality. Its transdisciplinary focus is literary utopias—novels of social theory—by authors seeking solutions to the problems of economic inequality. The work challenges our moral assumptions about economic inequality—its potential for resolution—or its inevitability and the ultimate bifurcation of society. It is not an economic treatise but an exploration in social philosophy in its utopian expressions. Economic inequality sets arbitrary limits on whose contributions will benefit society, thereby squandering talent, limiting opportunities, and stifling competition—capriciously restricting the pool of competitors—by class or gender or race. As utopian writers envision a future where the extremes of poverty and wealth have been tempered, it is instructive to explore the instruments they employ; by what measures have they defeated poverty or diminished the threats boundless fortunes pose, thereby revitalizing society?

Author Biography:

Donald Morris is Professor Emeritus at the University of Illinois, Springfield. His PhD in Philosophy is from Southern Illinois University (1978). Previous books include Taxation in Utopia: Required Sacrifice and the General Welfare (2020) and Tax Cheating: Illegal—But Is It Immoral? (National Book Award recipient in Political Science, 2012).
Release date Australia
April 25th, 2024
Author
Contributors
  • Series edited by Antonis Balasopoulos
  • Series edited by Joachim Fischer
  • Series edited by Michael G. Kelly
  • Series edited by Phillip E. Wegner
  • Series edited by Raffaella Baccolini
  • Series edited by Tom Moylan
Pages
356
Edition
New edition
Audience
  • Professional & Vocational
Illustrations
12 Illustrations, unspecified
ISBN-13
9781803741765
Product ID
38812524

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