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- S1 E1 - Utopia: The Perfect NowhereFebruary 2, 201730minEnter the world of utopian and dystopian fiction. After a brief foray into the definition and origin of utopia, dive into Ursula K. LeGuin's short story The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas and explore the ambiguities of "perfect" worlds. Then, get a deeper understanding of the ways genre functions and how it shapes literature.#Literature & LearningFree trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buy
- S1 E2 - Thomas More and Utopian OriginsFebruary 2, 201732minTake a step back and learn about the origins of the utopian genre, beginning with Thomas More's Utopia of 1516. More's foundational work gave us the word "utopia," but did it create the genre? Explore the elements of the story to see how it set conventions for later works but also critiqued the very idea of utopia in the process.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buy
- S1 E3 - Swift, Voltaire, and Utopian SatireFebruary 2, 201731minContinue your exploration of the early history of utopia by examining notable works produced during the two centuries following More's initial work. Compare and contrast the ideas of "classical utopia" and "critical utopia" and understand how laughter was an integral part of 18th-century utopian storytelling, focusing on Voltaire's Candide and Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buy
- S1 E4 - American Dreamers: Hawthorne and AlcottFebruary 2, 201732minThe 19th century was the "century of utopia" and also marked the transition from utopian to dystopian stories in popular literature. Look at Americans who attempted to build real-world utopias, and in turn examine the work of two authors who reacted to the American attempt at perfect societies. Consider the ways that optimistic, utopian thinking is integral to the idea of the American Dream.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buy
- S1 E5 - Samuel Butler and Utopian TechnologiesFebruary 2, 201732minShift your attention from rural American utopias to explore from a different perspective: Victorian anxieties about technology and the vanishing frontier. Analyze these fears in Samuel Butler's Erewhon, which utilizes utopian conventions and heavy doses of satire to critique religion, health, education, and humanity's increasingly complex relationship to machines.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buy
- S1 E6 - Edward Bellamy and Utopian ActivismFebruary 2, 201731minCan utopian literature have real-world impact? This question is integral to understanding the significance of Looking Backward by Edward Bellamy. Witness the ways Bellamy's socialist vision of the future had genuine influence on the social activists of Gilded Age America. Professor Bedore also introduces the idea of "euchronia."Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buy
- S1 E7 - H.G. Wells and Utopian Science FictionFebruary 2, 201730minUnlike the utopian tradition, science fiction doesn't have a single text that defines its origin. It does, however, have several figures credited with its creation. One such figure is H.G. Wells, who not only helped in the creation of science fiction as a genre, but was also deeply devoted to utopian thinking. Ultimately, his work brought utopia and science fiction together in the same space.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buy
- S1 E8 - Charlotte Perkins Gilman and Gendered UtopiaFebruary 2, 201731minMany utopian stories were concerned with the quest to determine where women belong in an ideal society. Charlotte Perkins Gilman went a step further by creating a utopian society populated solely by women: Herland. See how questions of gender equality are reframed without the reference of an opposite gender and the impact of Gilman's vision on the feminist movements of the later 20th century.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buy
- S1 E9 - Yevgeny Zamyatin and Dystopian UniformityFebruary 2, 201731minShift your attention from utopian blueprints to the cautionary tales of dystopia and explore the origins of the genre and the complex ways it functions in literature. Examine the period between World War I and World War II that produced the "Big Three Dystopias" and dive into the earliest of them, We by Yevgeny Zamyatin.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buy
- S1 E10 - Aldous Huxley and Dystopian PleasureFebruary 2, 201730minAldous Huxley's Brave New World, published in 1932, is the second of the "Big Three" dystopian novels of the interwar years. Investigate the ways Huxley projects the anxieties of his day onto the future, creating a world in which people are controlled not by pain or fear, but by pleasure, and consider how utopian and dystopia are often only matters of perspective.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buy
- S1 E11 - George Orwell and Totalitarian DystopiaFebruary 2, 201731minPerhaps the most famous of the three defining dystopias of the early 20th century, George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four has created a vocabulary of ideas we continue to use in political discourse today. Trace the ways Orwell uses language to shape his dystopic vision and the way it both reflects and distorts reality.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buy
- S1 E12 - John Wyndham and Young Adult DystopiaFebruary 2, 201730minPublished during the wave of anti-communist hysteria of the 1950s, John Wyndham's The Chrysalids is one of the earliest examples of Young Adult dystopian fiction and a potent examination of the "fear of the Other" in dystopian storytelling. See how it set the stage for the extremely rich strain of dystopian literature aimed at younger readers that dominates bestseller lists in the 21st century.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buy
- S1 E13 - Philip K. Dick's Dystopian Crime PreventionFebruary 2, 201731minLook at the portrayal of community, choice, and rules to determine when the sacrifices being made cross the threshold between a completely perfect society and a complete lack of freedom. As the genre starts to tackle "big" questions of philosophy around individual free will, the line blurs and we are left with dystopias that are dressed up to look like utopias.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buy
- S1 E14 - Anthony Burgess, Free Will, and DystopiaFebruary 2, 201732minDelve deeper into the central question of free will and how utopian studies respond emotionally and intellectually by examining A Clockwork Orange. Discover the literature that influenced it and was impacted by it, while exploring the nuanced differences between reading and watching this pivotal work. Burgess looks at extreme situations to pose questions we continue to struggle with.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buy
- S1 E15 - The Feminist Utopian Movement of the 1970sFebruary 2, 201733minThe feminist utopian movement began in the 1970s and, despite the name, doesn't feature very many traditional "utopias." There is a guarded optimism represented in these novels that dealt with real-world issues of discrimination by creating societies portrayed as classless, crimeless, government-free, but laden with satire.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buy
- S1 E16 - Ursula K. Le Guin and the Ambiguous UtopiaFebruary 2, 201731minDelve into the science fiction-based worlds of Ursula K. Le Guin, who approaches various situations with an open mind, drawing upon disciplines like physics, anthropology, and fine arts. She builds worlds in which people attempt all kinds of strategies of governance. Discover how Le Guin uses sci-fi and utopia to explore LGBTQ issues with the intent to change our views on gender and sexuality.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buy
- S1 E17 - Samuel Delany and HeterotopiaFebruary 2, 201732minFocusing on Trouble on Triton, explore the ways Delany introduces readers to ambiguous heterotopia through a society where your identity (such as sex, race, religion, and sexual preference) can easily be changed. Investigate whether this abundance of individual freedom results in utopia or dystopia.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buy
- S1 E18 - Octavia Butler and the Utopian AlienFebruary 2, 201731minNone of Octavia Butler's writings fit perfectly into the categories of utopia or dystopia, but she is vital to this study because her utopian writing represents a turning point that moves us from the feminist utopian renaissance of the 1970s to the more complex negotiation between utopian and dystopian impulses that helped shape the genres as they are today.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buy
- S1 E19 - Octavia Butler and Utopian HybridityFebruary 2, 201730minExamine the many ways Butler challenges boundaries - not only of genres, but also of human identity. See how she tackles the questions that are important in defining utopian futures: what does it mean to be human? Is utopia always an unresolvable paradox? And if it is, does it have to be? How much can we change and still be considered human? And really, does being human even matter?Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buy
- S1 E20 - Margaret Atwood and Environmental DystopiaFebruary 2, 201730minMargaret Atwood is an icon in utopian and dystopian fiction. Explore the ways she has helped to shape utopian thought and sexual politics with one of her classic novels, The Handmaid's Tale, as well as her more recent MaddAddam trilogy. Atwood is known for apocalyptic writing but you'll see how even her darkest works have elements of humor and satire with intrinsic meaning.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buy
- S1 E21 - Suzanne Collins and Dystopian GamesFebruary 2, 201730minDoes it seem like a lot of the most popular books for young adults lately have been dystopias? In this lecture, explore why teens are so drawn to dystopia, what current anxieties are being tracked in this large body of YA literature, and what the impact of this literature on young adult readers has been. You'll also discover why this subgenre is so popular with adults.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buy
- S1 E22 - Cyberpunk Dystopia: Doctorow and AndersonFebruary 2, 201731minThe cyberpunk genre often features advanced information technology. Through satire or in earnest, we get at the same anxieties about contemporary American society: the internet has amazing potential to create a better, more egalitarian world, but we may be going about it all wrong, creating a new generation of young people who rely on technology without truly understanding it.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buy
- S1 E23 - Apocalyptic Literature in the 21st CenturyFebruary 2, 201730minReview the four major apocalyptic sources: technological, biomedical, environmental, or supernatural, and explore bodies of work that utilize each one. You'll see how even the worst dystopian situations often sneak hopes of utopian thinking into the stories because humanity survives on a core of optimism that whispers that no matter how bad things get, we can imagine something better.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buy
- S1 E24 - The Future of Utopia and DystopiaFebruary 2, 201735minReflect on how dystopia shows us the darker side of contemporary reality right here in our connected global world, focusing on issues we struggle with every day. Conclude with the recurring theme around utopian yearnings and the sinister road that leads to dystopia, proving that the perfect place is no place. This powerful genre embodies a simultaneous optimism and cynicism.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buy
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