Annali di Ca’ Foscari. Serie occidentale

Journal | Annali di Ca’ Foscari. Serie occidentale
Monographic journal issue | 53 | Supplemento | 2019

Progetti per l’Umanità. Rivoluzioni, Utopie e Ingegneria Sociale

open access | peer reviewed
    edited by
  • Luca Cortesi - Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia, Italia - email orcid profile
  • Cristina Cugnata - Università Ca' Foscari Venezia - email orcid profile
  • Lucio De Capitani - Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia, Italia - email orcid profile
  • Giulia Frare - Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia, Italia - email orcid profile
  • Alice Girotto - Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia, Italia - email
  • Serena Vianello - Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia, Italia - email
Abstract

Progetti per l’Umanità. Rivoluzioni, Utopie e Ingegneria Sociale (Projects for Humankind. Revolutions, Utopias and Social Engineering) explores a variety of plans and attempts to transform human beings into something different and better. In particular, it engages with utopian thinking and its ineludible counterpart, dystopia; with moments of political, cultural or philosophical revolution aimed at triggering profound shifts in human life; and with different projects of social engineering to be accomplished through a variety of means such as education, propaganda or alterations to the human body or mind. The case studies included in this volume range from the 18th century to the present day, and involve disciplines such as literary and film studies, philosophy, political science and cultural history. In particular, the volume features essays on the following topics: mythology in German Romanticism; Martin Heidegger’s eschatology; Francesco Saverio Salfi’s essay on the 1783 earthquake in Calabria; the scapigliati writers Carlo Dossi and Giovanni Faldella; the utopian production of positivist anthropologist Paolo Mantegazza; the Proletkul’t movement; early Soviet children’s magazines; the political implications of Russian linguaculturology (lingvokul’turologija); Lafayette Ronald Hubbard’s Dianetics; Zulu intellectual and writer Herbert Dhlomo’s speculative fiction; “self-management” (autogestione) and the Italian Socialist Party in the 1970s; the current debate on surrogate motherhood; and Terry Gilliam’s dystopian film trilogy. Through these multiple perspectives, the volume argues that human projectuality is an anthropological constant throughout history that is both necessary for human existence and simultaneously fraught with dangers; and that it is therefore a crucial category to analyse reality and fiction alike.

Keywords German RomanticismNeoliberal ideologyAristotleSouth AfricaColonySocialismIslandSoviet cultureFreemasonryMission literatureTechnocratic cultureKinesisDystopiaCinemaMagazinesUtopian projectsSalfiScience fictionPaolo MantegazzaRussian languageBogdanovEarthquakeJacobinismItalian positivismNew mythologyRevolutionExpressionismTheory of HistoryUtopiaProletkultSublimityPSIRussian identityChildren’s literatureAnthropologyVoltaireHistoryMiddle-classDhlomoHeideggerEschatologyISurrogate motherhoodRussian revolutionBarbaritySuperstitionProletarian writersEarly 20th centuryPatriarchyIndustrial democracyLegitimation crisisHuman mindTheatralitySoviet RussiaCalabriaMessianismRomantic loveNeoliberalismPaternalismLinguisticsApocalypseNational characterShort storySpectacleHFSexualityTechnological utopianismTerry GilliamLingvokul’turologijaSelf-managementFemale reificationSchlegelE

Permalink http://doi.org/10.30687/AnnOc/2499-1562/2019/07 | Published Nov. 27, 2019 | Language it, de, en