Utopian Thinking and Imagination from Thomas More to Ernst Bloch - an Beyond. 43rd Wisconsin Workshop in Honor of Jost Hermand's Eightieth Birthday
Buch, Englisch, 166 Seiten, PB, Format (B × H): 145 mm x 205 mm, Gewicht: 250 g
ISBN: 978-3-89528-804-3
Verlag: Aisthesis
It is against this backdrop of recent cultural pessimism that this volume on The Temptation of Hope tries to rescue the power of utopian thinking and imagination. It reminds us of Bloch’s “encyclopedia of hope,” which permeates all aspects of life and gives utopian thinking a diversity and latitude it has never before known. Hope seems to be a human propensity. If it could be repressed or even forgotten, it would not have been a continuous part of the human experience or a factor of history.
The Temptation of Hope may seem to be too modest a title for a volume that deals with utopian thinking and imagination. The audacity of hope would have expressed more strongly the necessity of utopian thinking in our time. But, when we speak of hope, we should keep in mind that there is no certainty – only possibilities, latencies, and tendencies that have to be discovered and explored. Utopian thinking is first of all a criticism of the existing social order and a thought experiment of how it could be different.
The 43rd Wisconsin Workshop in honor of Jost Hermand’s eightieth birthday took place at the University of Wisconsin–Madison from September 9th to 11th, 2010. It explored some important aspects of the utopian discourse from Thomas More to Ernst Bloch – and beyond.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
Klaus L. Berghahn: Preface
Wilhelm Voßkamp: Rational Ordering and Human Existence. Narrative Staging of Image and Counter-Image by Thomas More
Jürgen Fohrmann: On Kant’s “as if”. Utopia and How to Tell a (Hi)story to Its End
Russell Jacoby: Karl Popper, Isaiah Berlin, and the Anti-Utopian Refugees
Klaus L. Berghahn: “Concrete Utopia” and “Exact Fantasy”. Utopian Thinking and Imagination in Ernst Bloch’s Principle of Hope
Angelika Bammer: Feminism, the Dream of Utopia, and the Rage of Lisbeth Salander
Peter Morris-Keitel: Imagining a ‘Green’ Future. Principles of Ecological Sustainability in Works by William Morris, Robert Havemann, Gioconda Belli, and Tschingis Aitmatow
Robert C. Holub: Academia as Heterotopia
Jost Hermand: The Necessity of Utopian Thinking
Robert C. Holub: Laudatio for Jost Hermand
List of Contributors