Utopian fiction
Authority Link
http://id.loc.gov/authorities/genreForms/gf2014026583
Label
Utopian fiction
Name
Utopian fiction
resource.lcgftId
gf2014026583
Source
lcgft
Mapped to
Actions
Incoming Resources
- Focus of1
- Genre of15
- The life & adventures of Sig Gaudentio di Lucca:, written by himself. ; Giving an account of the country in the midst of the vast desarts of Africa, being unknown to any person except Sig. Gaudentio, and its inhabitants, altho' as ancient, populous, and civilized, as the Chinese. With a particular account of their antiquity, origin, religion, customs, policy, &c.--the manner how they got first over those vast desarts ,--and their method of travelling. Interspersed with several most surprising and curious incidents. ; Copied from the original manuscript kept in St. Mark's Library at Venice
- Millennialism, utopianism, and progress, Theodore Olson
- Looking backward, 2000-1887, Edward Bellamy
- The priesthood of science, a work of Utopian fiction, William Leiss
- The privatization of hope, Ernst Bloch and the future of Utopia, Peter Thompson and Slavoj Zizek, eds
- Revelation 21-22 in light of Jewish and Greco-Roman utopianism, by Eric J. Gilchrest
- Utopian feminism, women's movements in fin-de-siècle Vienna, Harriet Anderson
- The crystal button, or, Adventures of Paul Prognosis in the forty-ninth century, Chauncey Thomas ; with a new introd. by Ormond Seavey
- Erewhon and Erewhon revisited, by Samuel Butler ; introduction by Lewis Mumford
- The history of Sir George Ellison, Sarah Scott ; Betty Rizzo, editor
- The adventures of Sig. Gaudentio di Lucca., Being the substance of his examination before the fathers of the Inquisition at Bologna, in Italy. Giving an account of an unknown country, in the midst of the desarts of Africa., Copied from the original manuscript in St. Mark's Library, at Venice. ; With critical notes of the learned Signor Rhedi. ; Translated from the Italian
- Visions of the city, utopianism, power and politics in twentieth-century urbanism, David Pinder
- A modern Utopia, by H.G. Wells ; with illustrations by E.J. Sullivan
- The common-wealth of Utopia:, containing a learned and pleasant discourse of the best state of a publick weal, as it is found in the new island called Utopia., Written by the Right Honourable Sir Thomas Moore, Lord Chancellor of England
- The adventures of Sig. Gaudentio di Lucca., Being the substance of his examination before the fathers of the Inquisition at Bologna, in Italy: giving an account of an unknown country, in the midst of the deserts of Africa, the origin and antiquity of the people, their religion, customs, and laws., Copied from the original manuscripts in St. Mark's Library at Venice; with critical notes of the learned Signor Rhedi. ; To which is prefixed, a letter of the secretary of the Inquisition, shewing the reasons of Signor Gaudentio's being apprehended, and the manner of it. ; Translated from the Italian
Outgoing Resources
- Mapped to2