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Barnes & Noble Classics: Utopia

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This edition is part of the Barnes & Noble Classics series, offering quality, affordable versions for students and general readers. It features new introductions by contemporary writers and scholars, author biographies, chronologies of historical events, footnotes, endnotes, and discussions of various adaptations inspired by the work. Additional elements include comments from notable authors, study questions, bibliographies, and indices or glossaries when relevant. Each edition is beautifully designed and printed to high standards, with some including historical illustrations. One of the most significant works in Western philosophy and literature, it was published in 1516 during a time of religious conflict in Europe. The narrative is presented by Raphael Hythloday, a sailor who discovers the island kingdom of Utopia, characterized by its uniformity in language, customs, and education across its fifty-four cities. The Utopians have abolished wealth, nobility, and currency, ensuring equal distribution of labor and goods, while eliminating temptations that might lead individuals away from society. More's work raises questions about whether it serves as a critique of European society or a philosophical exploration of ideal living. Ultimately, it grapples with the tension between the pursuit of perfection and the recognition of human fallibility. Wayne A. Rebhorn, a professor at the University of Texas at Austin, has extensively

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Barnes & Noble Classics: Utopia, Sir Thomas More, Wayne A. Rebhorn, Ralph Robinson

Langue
Année de publication
2005
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(souple),
État du livre
Abîmé
Prix
6,46 €

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Langue
Anglais
Publié
2005
Format
souple
Pages
215
ISBN10
1593082444
ISBN13
9781593082444
Séries
Description
This edition is part of the Barnes & Noble Classics series, offering quality, affordable versions for students and general readers. It features new introductions by contemporary writers and scholars, author biographies, chronologies of historical events, footnotes, endnotes, and discussions of various adaptations inspired by the work. Additional elements include comments from notable authors, study questions, bibliographies, and indices or glossaries when relevant. Each edition is beautifully designed and printed to high standards, with some including historical illustrations. One of the most significant works in Western philosophy and literature, it was published in 1516 during a time of religious conflict in Europe. The narrative is presented by Raphael Hythloday, a sailor who discovers the island kingdom of Utopia, characterized by its uniformity in language, customs, and education across its fifty-four cities. The Utopians have abolished wealth, nobility, and currency, ensuring equal distribution of labor and goods, while eliminating temptations that might lead individuals away from society. More's work raises questions about whether it serves as a critique of European society or a philosophical exploration of ideal living. Ultimately, it grapples with the tension between the pursuit of perfection and the recognition of human fallibility. Wayne A. Rebhorn, a professor at the University of Texas at Austin, has extensively