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Book Synopsis

“Utopia poses a question. Not simply in the sense of a problem to be resolved and at the same time eliminated . . . but in the sense that, within the economy of the human condition, utopia, the aim of social alterity—of all social otherness—is ceaselessly being reborn, coming back to life despite all the blows rained down upon it, as if human resistance had taken up residence within it.”

For the French philosopher Miguel Abensour, the fictional genre of utopia has provided thinkers and artists a fertile ground to explore for the past 500 years, both as a way to imagine new emancipatory practices of shared existence and as a tyrannical imposition of power. Here, Abensour’s project is to examine the idea of utopia in two different but powerful moments in its trajectory: first, utopia’s beginning, when Thomas More sought a path for justice through a world in transformation, and second, when utopia faced its greatest danger, the moment that Walter Benjamin called “catastrophe.”



Trade Review

"Short but an interesting eclectic reading, this book surely is an enjoyable reading for theorists of politics and cultural studies."—Leonardo

Utopia from Thomas More to Walter Benjamin

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Mon 22 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Miguel Abensour

    1 in stock


      View other formats and editions of Utopia from Thomas More to Walter Benjamin by Miguel Abensour

      Publisher: Univocal Publishing LLC
      Publication Date: 15/01/2017
      ISBN13: 9781945414008, 978-1945414008
      ISBN10: 1945414006

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      “Utopia poses a question. Not simply in the sense of a problem to be resolved and at the same time eliminated . . . but in the sense that, within the economy of the human condition, utopia, the aim of social alterity—of all social otherness—is ceaselessly being reborn, coming back to life despite all the blows rained down upon it, as if human resistance had taken up residence within it.”

      For the French philosopher Miguel Abensour, the fictional genre of utopia has provided thinkers and artists a fertile ground to explore for the past 500 years, both as a way to imagine new emancipatory practices of shared existence and as a tyrannical imposition of power. Here, Abensour’s project is to examine the idea of utopia in two different but powerful moments in its trajectory: first, utopia’s beginning, when Thomas More sought a path for justice through a world in transformation, and second, when utopia faced its greatest danger, the moment that Walter Benjamin called “catastrophe.”



      Trade Review

      "Short but an interesting eclectic reading, this book surely is an enjoyable reading for theorists of politics and cultural studies."—Leonardo

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