Narrating Utopia: Ideology, Gender, Form in Utopian Literature

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Liverpool University Press, 1999 - Fiction - 268 pages
Utopian societies exhibit a variety of ways of organizing the financial, political and emotional relationships between people. For all this diversity, however, one thing that exhibits far less variation is the story, the framing narrative that accounts for how the narrator reaches the more perfect society and obtains the opportunity to witness its distinctive excellences. Narrating Utopia is about that story, the curious hybrid of the traveler’s tale and the classical dialogue that emerges in the Renaissance, but whose outlines remain clearly apparent even in some of the most recent utopian writing.

"... a well-written and worthy addition to the filed of utopian studies."—SFRA Review

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About the author (1999)

Chris Ferns teaches at Mount St. Vincent University, Canada.