Reviews
"Professor Swirski is something of a phenomenon. His publishing record is superb by any standard. His background in European and American literatures is formidable. His style is witty, accessible, and admirably suited to his subject. A great teacher in the university classroom, Professor Swirski uses his pedagogical skills to take the reader via his books through a series of complex subjects on which he is obviously an expert. American Utopia is a superb example of his particular abilities manifesting themselves in a new and original project… a remarkably original contribution to American studies…. there really is no other book out there remotely like it." -- David Rampton, Department of English, University of Ottawa "This is a stunning book. Drawing on a rich blend of literary analysis, sociopolitical critique, and evolutionary biology, Swirski examines the hopes, horrors, and illusions of utopian social engineering through the lens of twentieth-century American fiction. Superbly crafted, accessible to the non-specialist, and intellectually exhilarating, American Utopia and Social Engineering should not be missed." -- David Livingstone Smith, Department of Philosophy, University of New England "American Utopia will be seen as a superb example of interdisciplinary research and will also find a market in academic circles, using material, as it does, from the biological sciences, neurosciences, the social sciences, literary theory, the humanities, philosophical thought, etc." -- Arthur Asa Berger, Broadcast and Electronic Communication Arts, San Francisco State University "Professor Swirski's subject is huge and complicated. Few scholars would even take it up, but he has managed to pursue it with considerable vigor and passion. The result is a book that is sometimes brilliant, usually provocative, and nearly always interesting… Swirski is clearly a first-rate interdisciplinary scholar who is doing important work." -- Philip R. Yannella, Professor of English and American Studies, Temple University "In the Sallisen opera, Paavo Haavikko's Ratsumies says: 'How can I dare to hope anything, when all my hopes come true?' Using imaginative examples from American literature as the testing ground, Peter Swirski examines in the same spirit the collective hopes that found their expression in sundry American utopias. What could-what would-happen if they were realized? Stay tuned to this book! -- Jaakko Hintikka, Department of Philosophy, Boston University, "Professor Swirski is something of a phenomenon. His publishing record is superb by any standard. His background in European and American literatures is formidable. His style is witty, accessible, and admirably suited to his subject. A great teacher in the university classroom, Professor Swirski uses his pedagogical skills to take the reader via his books through a series of complex subjects on which he is obviously an expert. American Utopia is a superb example of his particular abilities manifesting themselves in a new and original project a remarkably original contribution to American studies . there really is no other book out there remotely like it." -- David Rampton, Department of English, University of Ottawa "This is a stunning book. Drawing on a rich blend of literary analysis, sociopolitical critique, and evolutionary biology, Swirski examines the hopes, horrors, and illusions of utopian social engineering through the lens of twentieth-century American fiction. Superbly crafted, accessible to the non-specialist, and intellectually exhilarating, American Utopia and Social Engineering should not be missed." -- David Livingstone Smith, Department of Philosophy, University of New England "American Utopia will be seen as a superb example of interdisciplinary research and will also find a market in academic circles, using material, as it does, from the biological sciences, neurosciences, the social sciences, literary theory, the humanities, philosophical thought, etc." -- Arthur Asa Berger, Broadcast and Electronic Communication Arts, San Francisco State University "Professor Swirski "s subject is huge and complicated. Few scholars would even take it up, but he has managed to pursue it with considerable vigor and passion. The result is a book that is sometimes brilliant, usually provocative, and nearly always interesting Swirski is clearly a first-rate interdisciplinary scholar who is doing important work." -- Philip R. Yannella, Professor of English and American Studies, Temple University "In the Sallisen opera, Paavo Haavikko "s Ratsumies says: How can I dare to hope anything, when all my hopes come true? " Using imaginative examples from American literature as the testing ground, Peter Swirski examines in the same spirit the collective hopes that found their expression in sundry American utopias. What could "what would "happen if they were realized? Stay tuned to this book! -- Jaakko Hintikka, Department of Philosophy, Boston University
Table of Content
Introduction Life is More important Than Art, or Eutopia, Evolution, and Social Engineering 1. How I Stopped Worrying and Loved Behavioural Engineering, or Communal Life, Evolution, and B.F. Skinner's Walden Two 2. You're Not in Canada Until You Can Hear the Loons Crying, or Voting, People's Power, and Ken Kesey's One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest 3. You'll Never Make a Monkey Out of Me, or Morality, Proverbial Wisdom, and Bernard Malamud's God's Grace 4. We Better Kill That Instinct to Kill Before It Kills Us, or Violence, Mind Control, and Walker Percy's The Thanatos Syndrome 5. It Can't Happen Here, or Politics, Emotions, and Philip Roth's The Plot Against America