P2P Utopia
Apr. 15th, 2005 09:15 am
Oh, and all the Radio 3 artist documentary features produced by Piers Plowright, with their BBC Radiophonic Workshop scores. Klee, Picasso, Valery, all rendered in sound by Malcolm Clarke.)Anyway, here's the BBC's blurb about the Modernist Utopias edition of "In Our Time":
"I want to gather together about twenty souls," wrote D H Lawrence in 1915, "and sail away from this world of war and squalor and find a little colony where there shall be no money but a sort of communism as necessaries of life go, and some real decency". Utopias were in the air in the first decades of the twentieth century and the literature of the period abounds with worlds of imagined escape, feminist utopias, technological nightmares and rich imaginings of the world as it could or should become. Many of the societies that writers like H G Wells created were meant seriously, as signposts to a future that would seem horrific to us now, where the weak are eradicated and the strong prosper and procreate. What was it about that era that brought forward so many imagined futures? How did utopias become the dystopias of Brave New World and 1984, and why are writers so much less likely to create a Utopia now?"
Contributors: John Carey, Emeritus Professor of English Literature at Oxford University and editor of The Faber Book of Utopias. Steve Connor, Professor of Modern Literature at Birkbeck, University of London. Laura Marcus, Professor of English at the University of Sussex.
And here's the file. Modernist Utopias (mp3 file, 12MB)
Unrelated but...
Date: 2005-04-15 03:36 pm (UTC)