6 found
Order:
  1. The Utopian Alternative. Fourierism in Nineteenth-Century America.Carl J. Guarneri - 1993 - Utopian Studies 4 (1):136-137.
  2.  22
    An American Utopia and Its Global Audiences: Transnational Perspectives on Looking Backward.Carl J. Guarneri - 2008 - Utopian Studies 19 (2):147-187.
    This essay departs from conventional American Studies treatments to resituate Bellamy's utopia of 1888 within transnational debates over industrialism, socialism, and the state in European nations and their settler societies between 1890 and 1940. Building upon critical studies and information about the reception of Bellamy's utopia abroad, it offers three approaches: a genre-based analysis of the utopian hybrid that suggests textual bases for multiple readings; a transnational history of evolutionary socialism that helps explain Bellamy's global relevance in the 1890s and (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  3.  2
    Importing Fourierism to America.Carl J. Guarneri - 1982 - Journal of the History of Ideas 43 (4):581.
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  4.  37
    Once more beyond consensus: The “transnational turn” and american liberal nationalism: Carl J. Guarneri.Carl J. Guarneri - 2011 - Modern Intellectual History 8 (3):673-685.
    “It has been our fate as a nation not to have ideologies,” Richard Hofstadter famously wrote, “but to be one.” Defining that “American ideology” or “American creed” obsessed scholars of the consensus era, who celebrated Americans’ allegiance to a limited liberal vocabulary of rights, freedoms, and markets. The cultural transformations begun in the 1960s seemed to question the very idea of a unitary culture or creed, but some historians responded by exploring alternative ideological founding myths to the liberal consensus. Over (...)
    Direct download (6 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  5.  5
    Sabotaged: Dreams of Utopia in Texas by James Pratt.Carl J. Guarneri - 2021 - Utopian Studies 32 (3):679-681.
    Languishing in exile after Louis Napoleon's coup d'état of December 1851 shut down socialist agitation, the followers of the utopian theorist Charles Fourier turned their attention to the New World as an "asylum" where Fourierism's communal ideals might be realized. In so doing they joined a long line of utopian dreamers who saw the young United States as a promised land of free expression and social experimentation. The head of the French Fourierists, Victor Considerant, made contacts with the remnant of (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  6.  27
    The Americanization of Utopia: Fourierism and the Dilemma of Utopian Dissent in the United States.Carl J. Guarneri - 1994 - Utopian Studies 5 (1):72 - 88.