Great Utopian and Dystopian Works of Literature

by Pamela Bedore

Streaming video, 2017

Status

Available

Call number

809.93372

Collections

Publication

Great Courses (2017), 12 hours, 24 lectures, 243 pages

Description

Literary Criticism. Nonfiction. HTML: Can literature change our real world society? At its foundation, utopian and dystopian fiction asks a few seemingly simple questions aimed at doing just that. Who are we as a society? Who do we want to be? Who are we afraid we might become? When these questions are framed in the speculative versions of Heaven and Hell on earth, you won't find easy answers, but you will find tremendously insightful and often entertaining perspectives.Utopian and dystopian writing sits at the crossroads of literature and other important academic disciplines such as philosophy, history, psychology, politics, and sociology. It serves as a useful tool to discuss our present condition and future prospects - to imagine a better tomorrow and warn of dangerous possibilities. From Thomas More's foundational text Utopia published in 1516 to the 21st-century phenomenon of The Hunger Games, dive into stories that seek to find the best - and the worst - in humanity, with the hope of better understanding ourselves and the world. Great Utopian and Dystopian Works of Literature delivers 24 illuminating lectures, led by Pamela Bedore, Associate Professor of English at the University of Connecticut, which plunge you into the history and development of utopian ideas and their dystopian counterparts. You'll encounter some of the most powerful and influential texts in this genre as you travel centuries into the past and thousands of years into the future, through worlds that are beautiful, laughable, terrifying, and always thought-provoking..… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member smichaelwilson
Great lecture series dissecting multiple literary iterations of the concept of Utopian (and Distopian) worlds, histories, and realities. One of the better entries I have listened to from the Great Courses collection.
LibraryThing member davisfamily
More about theory than actual literature. Not what I expected.

Language

Original language

English

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