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Literary criticism
Jun 16, 2026
Analyzed by Llama- 4 Scout 17B 16E Instruct

The Elusive Dream of Utopia: Can Ideal Societies Ever Exist?

AI Summary
The concept of utopia has been explored in literature for centuries, from Thomas More's Utopia to modern science fiction. But can ideal societies ever exist in reality? A new book, The Uses of Utopia by Joad Raymond Wren, examines the history and feasibility of utopian societies.

The Concept of Utopia: A Literary Exploration

By definition, utopia cannot exist. In 1516, educated readers of Thomas More’s Utopia would have appreciated a tension between two possible derivations of this novel word: the Greek “eu-topos”, meaning good place, and “ou-topos”, meaning not a place at all. It might have been a compact warning that one should never attempt to turn utopias into reality.

The Evolution of Utopian Thought

In this richly diverting intellectual history of the idea, we begin, as we must, with Plato, and the zany prescriptions of his Republic (“we should neutralise the poets’ influence on mothers”). Passing in silence over the potentially utopian aspects of Jesus’s thinking, we arrive at More’s utopia, where “nothing is private”, and so “the common affairs be earnestly looked upon”. The great Renaissance scientist Francis Bacon’s New Atlantis portrays a utopia of rational scientific experimentation – which, Wren suggests ingeniously, might have inspired Wakanda in the Marvel Black Panther films.

The Patterns of Utopian Societies

Some patterns emerge: many utopias employ a framing device in which the narrator is accidentally or fantastically transported to a new land, and then subjected to reams of expository monologue about how it all works. Families are often abolished, with children raised in common. And in Edward Bellamy’s 1888 fantasy Looking Backward, Wren explains straightfacedly, “there are no law schools or lawyers, abolished here as in most utopias”.

The Coercive Nature of Utopia

Utopias are always coercive because not everyone will agree freely with their values. It is odd, then, that Wren never mentions a famous reckoning with the concept of utopia. In 1974, the American political philosopher Robert Nozick published Anarchy, State, and Utopia, which argues that the only morally permissible state is a “minimal” one that guarantees property rights and security, and enforces contracts.

The Future of Utopian Thought

Many features of the utopias in Wren’s splendid catalogue, after all, are rather sad. But inasmuch as utopias are primarily “organic machines for thinking about the premises of our thought”, Wren argues, they are more like science fiction – and some indeed have been science fiction. The best utopian fiction therefore ends up implicitly anti-utopian as well; at its highest level of practise, perhaps, utopia vanishes into the great flow of literature itself.