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- Digital Price: $19.00 USD (All sales final)
- Utopian Studies
- Penn State University Press
- Article
- Acerba illa vita velut carcere atque aculeo. Health or Death in More’s Libellus vere aureus: Early Modern Thought and Contemporary Debate Volume 27, Number 3, 2016, pp. 586-600
To further meet your research needs, the complete digital issue from this journal is also available for purchase for $31.00 USD.
This issue contains 27 articles in total
- Introduction to the Special Issue
- Hope and the Longing for Utopia: Futures and Illusions in Theology and Narrative ed. by Daniel Boscaljon (review)
- Everyday Utopias: The Conceptual Life of Promising Spaces by Davina Cooper (review)
- Utopías artísticas de revuelta by Julia Ramírez Blanco (review)
- Utopian Geographies and the Early English Novel by Jason H. Pearl (review)
- Spiritual and Visionary Communities: Out to Save the World ed. by Timothy Miller (review)
- Das Echo der Utopien: Tanz und Politik by Deutsches Tanzarchiv Köln, and: Intellectual Barbarians: The Kibbo Kift Kindred by Whitechapel Gallery (review)
- Dark Light: Utopia and the Question of Relative Surplus Population
- “A Conspiracy of the Rich”: Dystopianizing the Real in More’s Utopia
- Acerba illa vita velut carcere atque aculeo. Health or Death in More’s Libellus vere aureus: Early Modern Thought and Contemporary Debate
- Controversial More and Puzzling Utopia: Five Hundred Years of History
- Utopia’s Turkish Translations and Utopianism in Turkish Literature
- Portuguese Translations of Thomas More’s Utopia
- The “Czech-In” of Thomas More’s Utopia
- Thomas More in America
- Italian Translations and Editions of Thomas More’s Libellus vere aureus
- “The World Begins in Man”: A Brief and Selected History of Translations of Utopia into German
- Utopian Studies in Spain
- Italian Research on Utopia and Utopianism
- Utopian Studies in Ireland
- Contemporary Utopian Studies in Hungary
- Utopian Studies in Greece Today: A Brief Survey
- Utopian Studies in the Czech and Slovak Republics
- Utopia at Five Hundred: Satish Kumar, a Utopian
- Utopias, Past and Present: Why Thomas More Remains Astonishingly Radical
- Utopia at Five Hundred: Some Reflections
- Less of More
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