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  1. Homus Novus: The New Man as Allegory.Natalia Skradol - 2009 - Utopian Studies 20 (1):41 - 74.
    This article explores the "New Man" as a politically and philosophically charged ideologeme at the end of the 1920s and the beginning of the 1930s in Germany and Russia. It argues that approaching the New Man as an allegory in Walter Benjamin's sense of the term is helpful in understanding its status at the crossroads of the political and utopian discourse of modernity. This article analyzes the New Man as utopian allegory to reassess some of the current categories in more (...)
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  • “Great Reformation in the Manners of Mankind”: Utopian Thought in the Scottish Reformation and Enlightenment.Craig Smith - 2005 - Utopian Studies 16 (2):221 - 245.
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  • Isaiah Berlin and the totalitarian mind.Cécile Hatier - 2004 - The European Legacy 9 (6):767-782.
    One of the important—yet often underestimated—dimensions of the intellectual legacy of Isaiah Berlin is his contribution to the demystification of the totalitarian temptation in the twentieth century. This paper starts with an apparent paradox: Berlin is described as a major figure of the anti‐totalitarian camp, yet his writings nowhere touch explicitly on the totalitarian regimes of his time. Nonetheless, it is argued that Berlin's notion of “monism,” and his unique insight into the totalitarian mind, are an indirect yet valuable contribution (...)
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  • Morris, Wilde, and Le Guin on Art, Work, and Utopia.Laurence Davis - 2009 - Utopian Studies 20 (2):213 - 248.
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