Sir Thomas More wrote the first novel about an ideal world separate from the material one. In our time, Lois Lowry wrote about a community that appears utopian and perfect in the beginning but turns out to be somewhat of a dystopia as emotions and all humane feelings are eradicated. This book is called The Giver. Some other authors have experimented with the utopian/dystopian format, such as George Orwell with Nineteen Eighty-Four along with the novel Brave New World (not written by Orwell). Utopian nations or societies are on the mind of creative authors as perfect worlds are thought up of frequently. In Orwell's Nineteen Eighty Four, a book written in the 1940s, tells about a constantly watched society that proves to be dystopian. Because of the early years of the Cold War, Orwell was inspired to write a fiction book having to do with the secret police forces found in the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany during the 1930s. Orwell also wrote another book, Animal Farm, which tells of the rise of the Soviet Union through metaphors such as animals.
Thomas More, the author of the Utopia, narrates both Book 1 and 2. More also uses the character of Raphael, a traveller who finds the island of Utopia, to describe the city.
Thomas More
Because by definition Utopia is a Perfectcivilization
In Utopia
The address of the Utopia Memorial Library is: 800 Main St, Utopia, 78884 M
Hasrifendi. has written: 'Utopia Nagari Minangkabau'
Kate Hope has written: 'Our utopia'
Thomas More, the author of the Utopia, narrates both Book 1 and 2. More also uses the character of Raphael, a traveller who finds the island of Utopia, to describe the city.
Thomas More
Marianne DeKoven has written: 'Utopia limited'
G. Statera has written: 'Death of a Utopia'
Krystyna Trembicka has written: 'Miedzy utopia a rzeczywistoscia'
Because by definition Utopia is a Perfectcivilization
kindness
J. H. Levy has written: 'An individualist's utopia'
Rudolf H. Moos has written: 'Environment and Utopia'
Eleanor Hannah Ford has written: 'Chasing Utopia'