Academia.edu no longer supports Internet Explorer.
To browse Academia.edu and the wider internet faster and more securely, please take a few seconds to upgrade your browser.
2018, Socialist Studies/Études Socialistes
…
6 pages
1 file
Midway through News From Nowhere, William Morris's visionary novel of an imaginary future socialist society, the time-travelling explorer Guest interrogates his host, Hammond, about his memories of how things were made in the bad old days of capitalism. Guest wonders: surely if things were produced for the world market, they must have been made very well? "Quality!" Hammond crustily replies, "how could they possibly attend to such trifles as the quality of the wares they sold? […] It was a current jest of the time that the wares were made to sell and not to use; a jest which you, as coming from another planet, may understand but which our folk could not" (Morris 1890, 95-96). Now, by contrast,
2019
This paper discusses William Morris’s idea of a socialist revolution as envisioned in his utopian romance News from Nowhere (1892). It explores the factors which prompted the author to engage in the heated debates and actions of his time to reconstruct a commonwealth out of the late nineteenth century British society, plagued by growing inequality, shabbiness, injustice, ill health and unhappiness of the labouring majority. Drawing upon Karl Mannheim (1936) and Michael Bakhtin (1996 ), I attempt to situate Morris’s utopian mentality among the authors of the utopian tradition; and I read the text both as a perpetuation of the utopian tradition to inspire transformative action in times of crisis, and as a polemical rejoinder both to the conservatives’ “cacotopia”, and the liberals’ “Idea” of his time. Morris’s insistence on the baneful effects industrialism and urbanisation on the individual, the community, and environment are still relevant to our world. Keywords: Utopia- utopian men...
This research paper examines William Morris's perspectives regarding true art and literature in his novella, News from Nowhere, through mirroring two different systems in the utopia that he has invented, socialism and capitalism. According to Morris's understanding, we need a socialistic system to produce a true art because this system stands against class struggles, allows people to own pleasure in their works and endorses a popular art. On the other hand, capitalism, as the system of the Victorian age, does not permit the art and literature that Morris calls for coming into the existence because, in addition to being free from the mentioned characteristics, life becomes full of competitions resulting in labor divisions, people do not enjoy doing their works, and machines takes role of handiworks. Abstract: To attest the existence of a genuine art in the context of a socialistic society and the impossibility of that kind of art under capitalism, Morris invents a utopia based on a socialistic system in a way that readers notice the reason behind the non-existence of art under a capitalistic system, and the necessity of socialism for producing the art. In this socialistic atmosphere, art and literature mingle in people's daily lives. People live in a pleasurable life because of their reconciliation of their daily works with art; this attachment of their daily works with art leads them to spend happy times in their lives and enjoy works that they are doing in life. In contradiction to the Victorian age, dwellers of the utopia become free from any restriction that once existed upon a labor and undermine any obligations against labor because the freedom of work results in creating a true art and literature among the dwellers of the utopia. Thus, William Morris's News from Nowhere rebukes art and literature that exist under capitalism, and at the same time, appraises the medieval period and the life of the dwellers of the utopia for allowing a system based on socialism in which art becomes a part of labor, and this art truly reflects in their life.
Routledge eBooks, 2020
News from Nowhere (1890), Old Hammond describes England as 'a garden, where nothing is wasted and nothing is spoilt'. His companion Guest, a time traveller from the nineteenth century who has already been entertained with a brief tour of twenty-second-century London, questions this description. 'One thing, it seems to me, does not go with your word of "garden" for this country', he observes; 'you have spoken of wastes and forests, and I myself have seen the beginnings of your Middlesex and Essex forest. Why do you keep such things in a garden? And isn't it very wasteful to do so?' The explanation Old Hammond offers is that, as a society, Nowherians 'like these pieces of wild nature and can afford them, so we have them; let alone that as to the forests, we need a great deal of timber, and suppose that our sons and sons' sons will do the like.' 1 The wild thus has its place in Nowhere, serving both an aesthetic and a practical function. It meets, as Paul Meier observes, 'a dominating and impelling human need to draw from nature the means of existence as well as visual pleasure and healthy well-being'. 2 Living in an age in which, Morris claimed, 'if the air and the sunlight and the rain could have been bottled up and monopolized for the profit of the individual it would have been', it is no surprise that his vision of the future is one in which humanity has found a more appreciative and constructive engagement with the natural world. 3 News from Nowhere is largely regarded as Morris's culminating, if highly personalized, vision of Socialist ideals in practice. In May Morris's words, 'it epitomizes so much' in terms of Morris's thoughts and activities as a political campaigner in the 1880s, offering an imaginative interpretation of the ideas he had explored in his political lectures regarding how human beings might organize their communities and their interactions with Nature in a post-revolutionary society
I want in this paper to discuss the idea that Morris thought work and art/craft were more or less synonymous, and much of his writings, especially his socialist writings, were devoted to the elucidation of this idea.
2019
In this paper I will provide an analysis of William Morris’s News from Nowhere, which is usually considered to be a utopian fantasy, and I will especially try to show how wide and deep William Morris’s knowledge of Marx’s and Engels’s thought was. News from Nowhere is, first of all, a ‘political act’, but it can also be seen, on the one hand, as a strong criticism of the Victorian Age, and, on the other, as a Tendenzroman, since it prefigures, although with some inconsistency and naivety and perhaps with too much optimism, what should be the new Communist society.
While William Morris has long been recognized for his radical approach to the problem of labor, which built on the ideas of John Ruskin and informed his contributions to the Arts and Crafts philosophy, his ideas about waste have received much less attention. This article suggests that the Kelmscott Press, which Morris founded in 1891, was designed to embody the values of durability and sustainability in sharp contrast to the neophilia, disposability, and planned obsolescence of capitalist production. Many critics have dismissed the political value of Kelmscott Press on the basis of the handcrafted books' expense and rarity, but by considering Morris's work for Kelmscott in light of his fictional and non-fictional writings about waste around the time of the press's conception, we can see how Kelmscott laid the groundwork for a philosophy of sustainable socialism.
Language Sciences, 2011
Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Literature
“Value” is a concept structured by confusing relations between its social-ethical and its economic meanings (“I agree with your values”; “the sweater is a great value at that price”). The two meanings cannot be kept separate, but the negotiation of their relation has vexed theories of artistic and literary value since at least the rise of the discourse of aesthetics in the 18th century. Early attempts to separate aesthetic value from its economic counterpart involved analogies between what were understood to be different cognitive faculties (reason and emotion, say), and relations among competing claims to political standing (between the bourgeoisie and the sovereign, most of all). Liberal American conversations about literary and economic value after World War II worried over part-whole relations in terms of debates about the value of individual literary works in what seemed to be an ever-expanding multicultural canon. Postwar literary theories of economic and aesthetic value in a more Marxist vein turned to various narratives of the “subsumption” of social life by economic values: sometimes imagining that subsumption as a fatal error on the part of capitalism, since sociability is too unruly finally to organize according to economic principles, or as a terrible victory for a capitalism that had now transformed into something qualitatively different and more sinister, like a “bio-power.” But even these Marxist literary theories tended to ignore contemporary work in history, historical sociology, and critical theory that identified changes in the relation between what had once seemed to be at least notionally separate aesthetic and economic “spheres” not with subsumption per se, but with a crisis in capital’s ways of producing profitable surplus value, and exchangeable use values. Seen from the vantage of this scholarship, it becomes clear that not only do most discourses on the specific value of the aesthetic tend to lean too heavily on spatialized domain models of art and economics (which conceive of them as occupying, in reality or potential, different regions), but also this persistently demanded separation of art and economics rests in turn on a false distinction between politics and economics. Rethinking the specificity of art and literature without thinking of it as a separate sphere, or as necessarily resistant to capital, is a research project for the coming decades.
Victorian Periodicals Review, 2017
William Morris's News from Nowhere has been variously hailed as a socialist utopian fiction, a challenge to the realist novel, and a pioneering exercise in ethnography. In such readings, the novel is approached as a cohesive unit and positioned in conversation with the generic conventions of utopianism, realism, or romance. 1 In light of growing scholarly interest in the serial publication of Victorian novels, however, the publication of News from Nowhere in the socialist newspaper Commonweal deserves more sustained attention. Several of the key aspects of the novel-such as its open-ended and "polyphonic" qualities noted by Marcus Waithe-are best understood in relation to its serial format. 2 Building on work by Anna Vaninskaya, who has illuminated the newspaper's place within the wider capitalist print market, and Elizabeth Carolyn Miller, who has drawn attention to the utopian contents and design elements in Commonweal, this article will devote closer attention to the deployment of what Miller calls the "periodical tools" of "juxtaposition, editorial tone, and design" and their bearing on the novel's utopian tone and narratorial stance. 3 The following pages will consider News from Nowhere as a supplement to Commonweal that both completes and undermines its other contents. Just as the Commonweal newspaper offers a supplement to, and critique of, the mainstream press, the serialized novel provides an opportunity to reflect on, and deconstruct, the very news that Commonweal seeks to disseminate. 4 During the serialization of News from Nowhere, the newspaper oscillates between news reportage and utopian imaginings, with such juxtapositions giving rise to an unstable comparison between William Morris (as explorer of Nowhere) and Henry Morton Stanley (a famous explorer of Africa). This implicit comparison raises questions about the role of Com
A.M.G. Capomacchia - E. Zocca, Antiche infanzie. Percezioni e gestione sacrale del bambino nelle culture del Mediterraneo e del Vicino Oriente (Quaderni di Studi e Materiali di Storia delle Religioni 25), Brescia, 2020
Arqueoweb Revista Sobre Arqueologia En Internet, 2002
Crear y evaluar contenidos virtuales en museos. Visiones desde la experiencia de profesionales de Iberoamérica, 2024
Orthodox Judaism - New Perspectives, 2006
28th EAA Annual Meeting, Budapest, Hungary, Reintegration, 2022
Letramento(s); conceitos de trabalho no ensino, 2019
Humanities and Social Sciences Communication, 2023
Egyptian Journal of Anaesthesia, 2019
Acta commercii, 2018
The Astrophysical Journal, 2001
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 1994
Atherosclerosis, 2010
arXiv (Cornell University), 2022
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy, 2011
Revised Selected Papers …, 2010