Review of:
"Utopia: The Search for the Ideal Society in the Western World." Special
Exhibition at the New York Public Library. October 2000-January 2001.
Exhibition website: <http://www.nypl.org/utopia>.
- A few years ago, I told an English professor (who
regularly teaches Thomas More's Utopia in his Renaissance
literature courses) that I was preparing to give a paper at a conference
of the Society for Utopian Studies. He asked me where the meeting was
scheduled to take place. I answered, "Montreal." We discussed other
matters for a while and then, just as I was about to leave his office,
the professor said to me: "You realize you gave the wrong answer
to my question." "What question?" "About that Utopian Society's
meeting. The right answer should have been nowhere." He
smiled. "The utopians meet nowhere, eh?"
- Between October 2000 and January 2001, utopia was on view
in New York--in a special exhibition at the New York Public Library
entitled "Utopia: The Search for the Ideal Society in the Western World."
Jointly organized by the library and the
Bibliothèque nationale de France, the exhibition featured
more than 550 objects, including books, manuscripts, drawings, prints,
maps, photographs, films, and assorted ephemera. One part of the
exhibition represented manifestations of utopian thought and sentiment
from antiquity through the end of the nineteenth century. Another
represented the twentieth century and now continues in the virtual space of
the library's website (<http://www.nypl.org/utopia>), where it examines
the internet as the next "New World" of the apparently imperishable
utopian impulse.
- This is a large exhibition
that requires several hours of concentrated study, since every item on
display is worth one's time. The show encompasses only the tradition of
Western thought within which utopia acquired its own history of
evolution, its own great narrative, so to speak. Assembling an
exhibition like this is in itself an attempt to create a logic
of continuity of utopian ideology and praxis that begins with
the biblical Garden of Eden and ends with the metaworlds of cyberspace.
What comes in between is various, fascinating, and often unexpected; it
includes gulags and concentration camps, as well as the hippie communes of
the 1960s and 1970s. In addition to Thomas More's Utopia
(1516), the book that gave
the genre its name, one finds, for example, Thomas Jefferson's original
version of the Declaration of Independence; Voltaire's
manuscript of Candide opened to the El Dorado chapter; and
nineteenth-century cartoons ridiculing Cabet, Proudhon, and other social
visionaries. Overall, the exhibition presents a quirky history of
utopian imagination dominated by the human desire to improve everyday
reality and create a better place on earth.
- The New York Public Library exhibition included
two transparent plexiglass reading chambers, in which one could
peacefully reflect on a number of utopian texts, such as paperback
editions of Paine's Common Sense, Butler's
Erewhon, and Huxley's Brave New World. The
chambers were intended to allow one to appreciate the role
of the utopian impulse in Western history and imagination, but they
actually turned out to be a strangely disconcerting experience--indicative
perhaps of the astonishing ubiquity of the genre, if one
thinks of utopia as a genre. After several hours spent in the mixed
company of Francis Bacon, Karl Marx, and H. G. Wells, one realizes that
utopia affects all levels of human experience and is present in nearly
every form of artistic, political, and religious expression.
- This might be, in fact, the fundamental premise of the
utopian narrative: utopia is the essential, unfulfilled dream of
humanity that continues to affect us, but at the same time remains very
difficult to pin down. The most important distinction one could draw
between the exhibition's numerous manifestations of the utopian tendency
is between utopias imagined and utopias attempted. Utopia has always
been a matter of both theory and practice. The etymological root of the
word leaves it up to us to decide whether utopia is supposed to be a
place that is good (eu topos) or a place that does not exist
(ou topos). From the logical standpoint, the two possibilities
cancel each other out. Thomas More's paradox may have been just a
scholarly joke, but it still holds the world in doubt over the real
nature of the utopian project. When one speaks about utopia as a place
that is or can potentially be good, one considers it from the positive,
practical standpoint. When one speaks about utopia as a place that does
not exist, or exists only as the product of the imagination, one
understands it in terms of negation or criticism of the reality at hand.
The exhibition verifies that utopia simultaneously exists and does not
exist; it is
a valid instrument of social and technological change, but it is also a
permanently unfulfilled fantasy of a better life.
- This paradoxical status of utopia is also its
crucial problem. In Plato's The Republic (which has a
prominent place at the exhibition), Socrates paints a picture of the
perfect community while also insisting that the success of his argument
depends on the imaginative cooperation of his interlocutors: "suppose we
imagine a state coming into being before our eyes" (55); "imagine the
condition of men living in a sort of cavernous chamber underground"
(227). Socrates, Glaucon, and the other speakers in Plato's text work
out a scheme or plan for the ideal republic that, nevertheless, remains
largely within the imaginary, rather than realistic, sphere. The success
of the vision relies on the intensity of supposing, conceiving, devising,
imagining, or simply desiring the ideal society. The conversation is
neither idle talk, and nor is it a speech-act that would imply
immediate action. At one point in his discussion, Socrates refers to "a
pattern set up in the heavens for one who desires to see it and, seeing
it, to found one in himself. But whether it exists anywhere or ever will
exist is no matter; for this is the only commonwealth in whose politics
he can ever take part" (319-20). So much for utopia and reality. When
Socrates alludes to the fact that man can build a perfect commonwealth
"in himself," he really only allows for the possibility of an imagined
utopia. Other representatives of this particular understanding of utopia
in the exhibition include descriptions of the Golden Age (represented by
the appropriate section of a fifteenth-century manuscript of Ovid's
Metamorphoses) and the Land of Cockaigne; and several
Christian utopias such as the Garden of Eden, St. Augustine's City
of God, medieval manuscripts of the Book of
Revelation, and the New Jerusalem. Literary and philosophical
utopias written by More, Francis Bacon, Tomasso Campanella, Edward
Bellamy, William Morris, and others remain fictions prima facie and
as a whole they remind one of what Hegel once said in Philosophy of
History (Engels quotes it on the first page of
Socialism: Utopian and Scientific): "Since the sun had
been in the firmament, and the planets circled around him, the sight had
never been seen of man standing upon his head--i.e. on the Idea--and
building reality after this image" (31-32). For Hegel, political changes
brought forth by the French Revolution constituted the first sign that
human beings were after all going to build reality after an idea--but the
exhibition verifies that people stood on their heads quite a long time
before the French revolution, and long afterwards.
- What distinguishes Socrates's vision from
Aristotle's (mainly in Politics) is precisely the mode of
discussion. Aristotle envisions his ideal community from the example of
an already existing polis, Athens, and his main preoccupation lies in the
possible improvement of the city. Plato constructs his Republic upon an
idea; Aristotle forms his upon reality. Plato relies on imagination;
Aristotle relies on reason. Other "practical" examples of the utopian
impulse in the exhibition feature fifteenth- and sixteenth-century maps
and documents describing the newly discovered American continent. Among
these one can find Christopher Columbus's letter to King Ferdinand
announcing his discoveries in the New World. Soon after its
discovery, the new continent was hailed by the Europeans as the site of
the biblical Garden of Eden, a new Earthly Paradise, and an ideal place
for a utopian community. Subsequent events and experiences evidently put
these ideas to rest, but something genuinely exciting is still detectable
in these first documents of America's conquest. Another good example of
combining theory and practice is a set of designs for ideal cities, many
of them undertaken by Italian Renaissance architects. Few of these
cities ever materialized; the exception was the town of Palmanova near
Venice, whose sixteenth-century plan is also on display. The
revolutionary ideals of equality and reform constitute an even more
practical portion of the exhibition. The American and French
Revolutions are given appropriate place and focus; they are complemented
by the religious and secular utopian communities established in the
nineteenth century. The French Declaration of the Rights of
Man is included, and so are charts illustrating widespread changes
in weights, measures, and the calendar proposed by the French
revolutionaries. Religious communities such as the Shakers and the
Mormons are also represented, as are the secular communities of Robert
Owen's New Harmony in Indiana and Etienne Cabet's Icaria in Illinois
(these include photographs, drawings, prints, etc.).
- The twentieth century saw the flourishing of
science fiction, a form of utopianism primarily occupied with advances in
science and technology in both the near and distant future. As if to
illustrate this new direction, a full size replica of the robot used in
Fritz Lang's Metropolis stood guard at the entrance to
the room featuring the second half of the original exhibition.
Twentieth-century utopias also differ from their predecessors in another
aspect. It is only in this century that we clearly observe the emergence
of a troubling counter-genre, dystopia, in theory and in practice.
Utopia, it turns out, is a two-edged sword. The fascination with
progress, technology, and machines is represented by the Futurist
movement in art and literature that came to prominence in Fascist Italy.
The euphoric propaganda of the Soviet and Nazi regimes is juxtaposed with
the sordid reality these social systems produced: gulags, gas chambers,
and concentration camps.
- The latter part of the twentieth century offers
yet another perspective on the utopian impulse and its role in Western
civilization. The current debate on advantages and disadvantages of the
internet continues these utopian debates, with cyberspace
as another locus of utopian possibility. Cyberspace, among other things,
creates a potential for transforming oneself into alternate
personalities based on viritual, rather than physical, identity. It
allows human beings to participate in online communities that are not
inhibited by exigencies of space and time. Cyberspace is also said to
eliminate discrimination; it is a forum of free expression, promoting
democratic principles of equality and tolerance. This is why
virtual space is regarded as potentially utopian space. In the
words of John Perry Barlow, author of A Declaration of the
Independence of Cyberspace, "ours is a world that is both
everywhere and nowhere, but it is not where bodies live. We are creating
a world that all may enter without privilege or prejudice accorded by
race, economic power, military force, or station of birth." The
availability of e-mail, avatars, and chat rooms offers a new perspective
on human communications and on human existence in general. The
flip side to this, of course, is apparent: the facility with which
alternate personalities can be created online may lead to isolation,
alienation, and deception. Is the internet a great equalizer? To some
extent, yes--but there still
exists a potential for discrimination and stratification.
Consider:
cyberspace is available to millions of people,
but only if these people have access to a personal computer,
modem, and service provider, a condition which automatically exludes a
tremendously large precentage of the global population.
- The exhibition's website offers an abundant selection of
materials from the original show, and it includes both text and
pictures. It also contains a very impressive collection of links to other
utopian and cyberspace resources. The website is divided into several
sections: Sources, Other Worlds, Utopia in History, Dreams and Nightmares,
and Metaworlds. The last section offers a complex engagement with the
relationship between utopia and cyberspace, with discussions of parallels
between developments in utopian thought and the history of the internet,
debates on the internet as a possible utopia, and additional remarks from
utopian scholars and experts. In most of these comments one can detect,
unsurprisingly, a skeptical resistance to the idea of the internet as an
utopian enterprise. "Real" life is still the only life, most utopianists
argue, and they consider the internet as something advantageous only to
the extent that it makes our real lives easier. Most often, they regard
the internet as an advanced form of communication technology, currently
fascinating because of its novelty and potential, but likely to feel
less utopia-like the more we become accustomed to it. In fact, the whole
discussion of cyberspace as utopia may eventually fade away when we begin
to take it for granted, just as we eventually took steam engine trains,
automobiles, telephones, and television for granted. These technological
advances changed our lives, to be sure, but at a pace much slower and
in ways more complex than either their enthusiasts or enemies probably would
have liked to imagine. At this point, a kind of coolheaded enthusiasm
among utopian
commentators still prevails, even though some of them are concerned with
the dangers of cyberspace that make the internet seem
closer to a possible dystopia. In a small way, viewers of the website can
also contribute to the debate by taking part in a poll on the
relationship between utopia and cyberspace. Although the
website is potentially available to millions of people, only approximately
30 have taken part in the survey so far!
- Even before the publication of More's book in 1516,
utopia existed in the millenarian visions of Old Testament prophets, the
philosophy of Plato and Aristotle, and the poems of Ovid. Throughout the
centuries, humanity has confronted remarkable ideas that convey the
utopian impulse, including stories, novels, and political, philosophical,
and scientific treatises, and there have been numerous attempts to put
these ideas into practice. Some of these permanently altered the face of
humanity, while others faded into obscurity. Poised between myth and
prophecy, utopia denotes both a recovery of the past and a promise of the
future. Although it does not have a defined social role, utopia
frequently intends to set a model of society that could be imitated or at
least considered as an alternative to the present conditions. Does this
mean that utopia is essentially progressive? Can dreams be productive?
One is reminded of the good-hearted courtier Gonzalo in Shakespeare's
The Tempest, whose fanciful and candid refusal to confront
the reality at hand produces a conventional and necessarily
self-contradictory definition of an ideal commonwealth: if he were its
king, he would allow "no sovereignty" (II.i.162). If Gonzalo's
commonwealth had ever materialized, it would have been
mercilessly refuted by reality the way it was refuted in so many tragic
instances in the twentieth century. Utopian consciousness is bound to be
whimsical, arbitrary, and sometimes outright dangerous--which may be why
so many utopian experiments have ended as dystopias.
- To return to my anecdote, during my trip to Montreal for the
conference of the Society for Utopian Studies I was filled with
apprehensions about various Etienne Cabets and Theodore Hertzkas that I
half-expected to encounter there. What I found instead was a group of
serious thinkers and activists. Many papers I heard were extremely
stimulating, but none surpassed my own co-panelist's presentation on
teaching the issues of environmental sustainability to inner-city college
freshmen. Here was someone addressing authentic problems and finding
excellent practical solutions to them. In the end, the conference
revealed to me the true nature of utopia. The best riposte to those who
say utopia can only be found nowhere is that, by the same token, it might
also be found anywhere.
English Department
University of Miami, Coral Gables
pgwiazda@mail.as.miami.edu
COPYRIGHT (c) 2001 BY PIOTR GWIAZDA.
READERS MAY USE PORTIONS
OF THIS WORK IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE FAIR USE PROVISIONS OF U.S. COPYRIGHT
LAW. IN ADDITION, SUBSCRIBERS AND MEMBERS OF SUBSCRIBED INSTITUTIONS MAY
USE THE ENTIRE WORK FOR ANY INTERNAL NONCOMMERCIAL PURPOSE BUT, OTHER THAN
ONE COPY SENT BY EMAIL, PRINT OR FAX TO ONE PERSON AT ANOTHER LOCATION FOR
THAT INDIVIDUAL'S PERSONAL USE, DISTRIBUTION OF THIS ARTICLE OUTSIDE OF A
SUBSCRIBED INSTITUTION WITHOUT EXPRESS WRITTEN PERMISSION FROM EITHER THE
AUTHOR OR THE JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY PRESS IS EXPRESSLY FORBIDDEN.
THIS ARTICLE AND OTHER CONTENTS OF THIS ISSUE ARE
AVAILABLE FREE OF CHARGE UNTIL RELEASE OF THE NEXT ISSUE. A
TEXT-ONLY ARCHIVE OF THE JOURNAL IS ALSO AVAILABLE FREE OF CHARGE. FOR
FULL HYPERTEXT ACCESS TO BACK ISSUES, SEARCH UTILITIES, AND OTHER VALUABLE
FEATURES, YOU OR YOUR INSTITUTION MAY SUBSCRIBE TO
PROJECT MUSE, THE
ON-LINE JOURNALS PROJECT OF THE JOHNS
HOPKINS UNIVERSITY PRESS.
Works Cited
Barlow, John Perry. A Declaration of the Independence of
Cyberspace. The Electronic Frontier Foundation, 1996. <http://eff.org/~barlow/Declaration-Final.html>.
Engels, Friedrich. Socialism: Utopian and Scientific.
Trans. Edward Aveling. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press Publishers, 1935.
Plato. The Republic. Trans. F. MacDonald Cornford.
London: Oxford UP, 1945.
Shakespeare, William. The Riverside Shakespeare: The Complete
Works. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1997.
|