The Revival of Political Imagination - by Teppo Eskelinen (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- The Revival of Political Imagination offers a unique examination of the methodological aspects of utopia.
- About the Author: Teppo Eskelinen is Senior lecturer in Development Studies at the University of Jyväskylä, Finland.
- 184 Pages
- Social Science, Methodology
Description
About the Book
Analyses the function of utopias and utopia as a tool for social criticism, method and imaginative spaces, to develop utopias as methodology.
Book Synopsis
The Revival of Political Imagination offers a unique examination of the methodological aspects of utopia. Discussing utopia as a tool for social criticism, method and imaginative spaces - rather than in terms of its content - this volume analyses the function of utopias, to develop utopias as methodology and to show how instrumental utopian modes of thought can be in such diverse fields such as education, labour, and housing.
Including discussions of traditional and contemporary utopias, as well as various forms of expression of utopian hope, from literature to social science and cultural practices, The Revival of Political Imagination is both analytical and practical in its elucidation of how political theory can function to foster our imaginative skills.
Review Quotes
'A valuable contribution to contemporary scholarly debates in both Utopian Studies and the social sciences more broadly. Its individual case studies provide a wide-ranging and engaging exploration of the contemporary relevance of the "imaginative skill" of utopian dreaming as a means of facilitating social transformation.
Mark Allison, Ohio Wesleyan University
This vibrant collection covers the bases for a re-energized, "re-radicalized" utopian political imagination. The contributors offer a fresh and wide-ranging use of the utopian method to imagine social alternatives and shore up collective struggles against global dystopian tendencies. A timely example of the kind of social critique from a utopian point of view we desperately need.
S. D. Chrostowska, York University, Canada
About the Author
Teppo Eskelinen is Senior lecturer in Development Studies at the University of Jyväskylä, Finland. A philosopher, Eskelinen has also worked as a lecturer in social and public policy. His research interests include political economy and global justice broadly understood, and he has also done research on radical democracy, classics of heterodox economics and economic alternatives.