THE RATIONALIST CRITIQUE OF UTOPIAN THINKING Cover Image

THE RATIONALIST CRITIQUE OF UTOPIAN THINKING
THE RATIONALIST CRITIQUE OF UTOPIAN THINKING

Author(s): Corin Braga
Subject(s): Literary Texts
Published by: Editura Universităţii din Bucureşti
Keywords: Utopia; Dystopia; Francesco Doni; Richard Brome; Edward Ward; Jonathan Swift; Gabriel François Coyer.

Summary/Abstract: During 17th-18th centuries, the pressure exercised by combined critiques due to religious ideology and later on by rationalist mentality rendered utopias suspect to the eyes of many authors. Christian counter-utopists, ranging from Joseph Hall to Jonathan Swift, accepted and adopted the dogmas related to the Lost Earthly Paradise and Man’s Cursed City, transforming the utopian space into hell on earth, into monstrous kingdoms that would rival Dante’s circles. In turn, humanist counter-utopists, skeptical regarding man’s capacity of establishing a perfect society, found other means of expressing their incredulity as well as their sarcasms. They imagined madmen islands and kingdoms of fouls, demonstrating, by reductio ab absurdum, that the application of the ideals of reason to social programs would only led to nightmarish societies.

  • Issue Year: 2011
  • Issue No: 02
  • Page Range: 120-133
  • Page Count: 13
  • Language: English
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