Julian West, a feckless aristocrat living in Boston in 1887, plunges
into a deep hypnotic sleep. When he wakes up in the year 2000, America
has been turned into a rigorously centralized democratic society in
which everything is controlled by a humane and efficient state. In
little more than a hundred years, the horrors of nineteenth-century
capitalism have been all but forgotten. Broad streets have replaced the
squalid slums of Boston, and technological inventions have transformed
people's everyday lives. Exiled from the past, West excitedly settles
into the ideal society of the future, while still fearing that he has
dreamt up his experiences as a time traveller.
Edward Bellamy's Looking Backward is a thunderous indictment of
industrial capitalism and a resplendent vision of life in a socialist
utopia. Matthew Beaumont's lively edition explores the political and
psychological peculiarities of this celebrated utopian fiction.
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