|
Summary
-
PART I : Historical
and philosophical overview
John P. Clark, Anarchism and the dialectic
of utopia
-
PART II : Antecedents
of the anarchist literary utopia
John A. Rapp, Daoism as utopian or accommodationist:
radical Daoism reexamined in light of the Guodian Manuscripts; Peter
G. Stillman, Diderot's Supplément
au voyage de Bougainville: steps towards an anarchist utopia
-
PART III : Anti-capitalism
and the anarchist utopian literary imagination
Laurence Davis, Everyone an artist: art,
labour, anarchy, and utopia; Nicholas
Spencer, Anarchist powers: B. Traven, Pierre
Clastres, and the question of utopia; Gisela
Heffes, Utopia, anarchism and the political
implications of emotions; Brian
Greenspan, Anarchy in the archives: notes
from the ruins of Sydney and Melbourne
-
PART IV : Free love:
anarchist politics and utopian desire
Judy Greenway, Speaking
desire: anarchism and free love as utopian performance in fin de siècle
Britain; Brigitte Koenig, Visions
of the future: reproduction, revolution and regeneration in American anarchist
utopian fiction; Dominic
Ording, Intimate fellows: utopia and chaos
in the early post-Stonewall gay liberation manifestos
-
PART V : Rethinking
revolutionary practice
Saul Newman, Anarchism,
utopianism and the politics of emancipation; Ruth
Kinna, Anarchism and the politics of utopia; Judith
Suissa, 'The space now possible': anarchist
education as utopian hope; Uri
Gordon, Utopia in contemporary anarchism
|
 |