A Rational Millennium: Puritan Utopias of Seventeenth-century England and AmericaOxford University Press, 1987 - 371 sider Taking a new approach to the history of utopia, this volume combines the political study of literary form with the literary study of political rhetoric. After arguing that early modern utopists, both literary and non-literary, attempt to reshape displaced populations, Holstun concentrates on two utopian projects of the mid-17th century: the political platforms and Algonquin "praying towns" of John Eliot in Massachusetts and the republican political writing of James Harrington in Protectorate England. Moving between these projects and modern analyses of rationalization, he shows that Puritan utopia shares the modern Western longing for universal social discipline and that it envisions this discipline as the rational means to the Millennium. |
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Side 172
... speaks of the people not ( or not only ) as the spokesman for a rising class speaks for that class , nor as a Leveller democrat speaks for the possessor of nat- ural rights , nor as an aristocrat speaks of an unmanageable population ...
... speaks of the people not ( or not only ) as the spokesman for a rising class speaks for that class , nor as a Leveller democrat speaks for the possessor of nat- ural rights , nor as an aristocrat speaks of an unmanageable population ...
Side 237
... speak evil of the sovereign representative . . . or to argue and dispute his power ; or any way to use his name irreverently " ( 221 , 222 ) . The counselor of the sovereign must be both experienced and disinterested . He speaks not ...
... speak evil of the sovereign representative . . . or to argue and dispute his power ; or any way to use his name irreverently " ( 221 , 222 ) . The counselor of the sovereign must be both experienced and disinterested . He speaks not ...
Side 247
... speaks in the same language as the uto- pists , he speaks in a different genre , for this tract is finally an anti - uto- pian jeremiad . It argues that the individual political writer can join a proper collectivity only by withdrawing ...
... speaks in the same language as the uto- pists , he speaks in a different genre , for this tract is finally an anti - uto- pian jeremiad . It argues that the individual political writer can join a proper collectivity only by withdrawing ...
Indhold
Introduction | 3 |
Paradise NewModeled | 34 |
John Eliots Empirical Millennialism | 102 |
Copyright | |
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