Saturday, August 3, 2019
Does Utopia describe an ideal society? Essay -- English Literature
Does Utopia describe an ideal society?    Thomas More was born in London in 1477. More had an extensive  education and rose quickly through the Government hierarchy and  attained high office. In May 1515 he was appointed to a delegation to  help revise an Anglo-Flemish commercial treaty. During this time he  began writing Utopia and completed it upon his return to London.  Utopia was first published in Latin, at Louvain in December 1516. More  added Utopia just before the outbreak of the reformation, during a  time when the stresses and corruption that led to the reformation were  rapidly increasing towards conflict.    Utopia itself depicts what its narrator Hythloday, claimed to be an  ideal society. The book became a huge success and founded a literary  tradition known as ââ¬Ëthe utopian novelââ¬â¢. This tradition is an authors  attempt to describe a perfect and ideal society.    The book is in two parts, and it is believed that the first was  written last and the second was written first. The first book (book 1)  is presented as an introduction to book 2 as well as providing  commentary to it. It is also viewed by many that the first book was  likely to have been written in two parts, firstly, to briefly  introduce the characters particularly the narrator: Hythloday. With  the second part being of Hythloday giving an extended speech on a  number of subjects with some being of a major interest to More the  author.    Book one starts off as a discussion between More, Hythloday and Peter  Giles. At first the discussion is very relaxed, starting off in a  church, then continuing into a garden and also at a friendââ¬â¢s dinner  but soon becoming more and more intense as they enter into debates  such as practical politics and the problem of th...              ...cter  Hythloday translates into ââ¬Ëexpert in nonsenseââ¬â¢. Showing that overall,  More may not have perceived Utopia a society of idealism and  perfection, but it would seem that many of Utopiaââ¬â¢s policies offer  criticisms and resolutions to the problems he saw in Europe at the  time, and so it is vital to see that this book is a response to a  specific historical period.    Bibliography    Logan, G, M., Adams, R, M. (1997). Utopia. London: Cambridge  University Press.    Skinner, Q. (1978). The foundations of modern political thought: The  Renaissance V.1. London: Cambridge University Press.    More, T., Turner, P (editor). Utopia (2003). London: Penguin Books  ltd.    Solomon, R, C., Higgins, K, M., (1996). A short history of Philosophy.  Oxford: Oxford University Press.    -  Thomas More/Utopia Websites:    www.d-holliday.com/tmore/bio/html    www.utoronto.ca/links.html                      
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