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Summary
José Eduardo Reis and Jorge Bastos da Silva, Introduction; Evy
Varsamopoulo, The Fruit of the Planted Oar: Utopia
in the Odissey; Rui Bertrand Romão, A
Cannibal Utopia: On Montaigne’s Essays; José Eduardo
Reis, The Sea, “that Great Utopian Substance”:
For an Ideal-Maritime History in Portuguese Literature; Gisle
Selnes, Shipwreck and Utopia in Colonial Spanish
America; Alex-Alban Gómez Coutouly, Spanish
Literary Utopias: Omnibona and The Desired Government; Maria
Luísa Malato Borralho, Aux Marches du Palais:
L’Emblème d’une Académie Portuguaise du XVIIe Siècle; Maria
Teresa Castilho, Utopianism in The Scarlet
Letter; Iolanda Freitas Ramos, Madness
and Utopia in John Ruskin’s Thought; Maria
Varsam, Do the Right Thing? Knowledge and Agency
in Ursula Le Guin’s “The Ones who Walk away from Omelas”; Maria
Aline Seabra Ferreira, The Übermensch in
the Laboratory: Margaret Atwood’s Oryx and Crake; Annette
M. Magid, Commuting with Relationships: A Look
at the Influence of Nineteenth Century Communes on Utopian Space Travel and Stations; Matthew
Rampley, “We Have Suddenly Become Severe”:
Ernst Bloch as a Critic of Modern Architecture; Styliane
Philippou, Utopian Modernism in the Land of the
Future: Brasília, the “Capital of Hope”; Isabel
Donas Botto, Redesigning Utopia for the Twenty-First
Century? Reflections on Current Projects of Urban Regeneration in the United
Kingdom; Peter Kraftl, Constructing,
Performing and Unsettling Utopia: Geographies of Built Space at the Hundertwasser-Haus,
Vienna; Rachel Haidu, The
Imaginary Space of the Wishful Other: Thomas Hirschhorn’s Cardboard Utopias; María
do Mar Castro Varela and Nikita Dhawan, Spatializing
Resistance - Resisting Spaces: On Utopias and Heterotopias; Derya
Ozkan, Antinomy Perfected: Everyday Life and Utopia
in Situationist Politics of Space; Dalie Giroux, Utopie/Terre/Sôma
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