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Tom Moylan

    Das Unmögliche verlangen
    Utopia method vision
    Demand the impossible
    Becoming Utopian
    • Becoming Utopian

      The Culture and Politics of Radical Transformation

      • 314pages
      • 11 heures de lecture
      4,6(9)Évaluer

      Exploring the journey from dreams to reality, this book delves into the utopian process that inspires social change. Tom Moylan, a key figure in utopian studies, engages with influential theorists and science fiction authors to advocate for sociopolitical action. He addresses various themes, including liberation theology, ecological activism, and the radical movements of 1968, emphasizing the necessity of confronting today's pressing global crises. Moylan's work serves as a call to action for individuals and communities striving for a better world.

      Becoming Utopian
    • Demand the impossible

      Science Fiction and the Utopian Imagination

      • 328pages
      • 12 heures de lecture
      4,5(4)Évaluer

      Although published in 1986, Demand the Impossible was written from inside the oppositional political culture of the 1970s. Reading works by Joanna Russ, Ursula K. Le Guin, Marge Piercy, and Samuel R. Delany as indicative texts in the intertext of utopian science fiction, Tom Moylan originated the concept of the «critical utopia» as both a periodizing and conceptual tool for capturing the creative and critical capabilities of the utopian imagination and utopian agency. This Ralahine Classics edition includes the original text along with a new essay by Moylan (on Aldous Huxley’s Island) and a set of reflections on the book by leading utopian and science fiction scholars.

      Demand the impossible
    • Utopia method vision

      • 345pages
      • 13 heures de lecture
      3,5(4)Évaluer

      Informed by feminist, Marxist, ethnographic, and post-structuralist frameworks, Utopia Method Vision makes a unique contribution to international debates in cultural, literary, sociological, and political studies of utopian theory, texts, and practices. The collection addresses the ways in which the contributors approach their study of the objects and practices of utopianism (understood as social anticipations and visions produced through texts and social experiments) and of how, in turn, those objects and practices have shaped their intellectual work in general and their research perspectives in particular. In so doing, the contributors develop a larger, self-critical look at the limits and potential of the entire paradigm by which utopianism is known, studied, critiqued, created, and received.

      Utopia method vision