Looking Backward: Dystopian Classic

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Bol Edward Bellamy's Looking Backward: Dystopian Classic is best understood as a provocative utopian counterpoint to the anxieties of industrial modernity. Through the enchanted sleep of Julian West, a Boston gentleman of 1887, the novel imagines the year 2000, where competition has yielded to a rational cooperative commonwealth. Its prose is lucid, expository, and deliberately didactic, blending romance, dialogue, and social theory. Emerging from the Gilded Age, it belongs to the great nineteenth-century tradition of speculative reform fiction. Bellamy (1850-1898), a Massachusetts journalist and novelist, wrote amid labor unrest, monopolistic capitalism, and widening class divisions. His experience in newspapers sharpened his attention to social facts, while his moral imagination pressed him toward systemic remedies rather than mere sentiment. The book's extraordinary popularity helped inspire Nationalist Clubs devoted to Bellamy's program of economic cooperation. Readers interested in political fiction, intellectual history, or the genealogy of modern science fiction will find this work indispensable. Its solutions may appear schematic, but its central questions-how wealth should be organized, how work should serve dignity, and what civilization owes its citizens-remain urgently alive.

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Edward Bellamy's Looking Backward: Dystopian Classic is best understood as a provocative utopian counterpoint to the anxieties of industrial modernity. Through the enchanted sleep of Julian West, a Boston gentleman of 1887, the novel imagines the year 2000, where competition has yielded to a rational cooperative commonwealth. Its prose is lucid, expository, and deliberately didactic, blending romance, dialogue, and social theory. Emerging from the Gilded Age, it belongs to the great nineteenth-century tradition of speculative reform fiction. Bellamy (1850-1898), a Massachusetts journalist and novelist, wrote amid labor unrest, monopolistic capitalism, and widening class divisions. His experience in newspapers sharpened his attention to social facts, while his moral imagination pressed him toward systemic remedies rather than mere sentiment. The book's extraordinary popularity helped inspire Nationalist Clubs devoted to Bellamy's program of economic cooperation. Readers interested in political fiction, intellectual history, or the genealogy of modern science fiction will find this work indispensable. Its solutions may appear schematic, but its central questions-how wealth should be organized, how work should serve dignity, and what civilization owes its citizens-remain urgently alive.


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  • 9788027385737
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