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The Nature of Utopia: The ecological foundations of Joseph Déjacque’s anarchist utopianism (c. 1850s)
    
	In 1858, the anarchist Joseph Déjacque began to serially publish his vision of a future anarchic utopia titled L’Humanisphère. He sketches a hyper-advanced future society free from want and coercion, where humanity and nature coexist harmoniously in an anarchist ecumenopolis. This obvious ecologism, however, rests on the foundations of a highly idiosyncratic ecological understanding of politics generally and utopia in particular. Drawing on the influences of Charles Fourier and Pierre Leroux, I aim to elaborate Déjacque’s utopianism, which emerged directly out of his understanding of nature and humanity’s position within it. Politics follows nature, not the other way around.
Date:
2 May 2024, 12:30
Venue:
  History Faculty, George Street OX1 2RL
  
Venue Details:
  Merze Tate Room
  
Speaker:
  
    Ben Stemper
  
    
Organising department:
    Faculty of History
    
Part of:
    Environmental History Working Group
Booking required?:
Not required
Audience:
Members of the University only
    
Editor: 
      Belinda Clark