The United States today is afflicted with political alienation,
militarized violence, institutionalized poverty, and social agony.
Worst of all, perhaps, it is afflicted with chronic and acute
ahistoricism. America insist on ignoring the context of its present
dilemmas. It insists on forgetting what preceded the headlines of
today and on denying continuity with history. It insists, in short,
on its exceptionalism.
American Utopia and Social Engineering sets out to correct this
amnesia. It misses no opportunity to flesh out both the historical
premises and the political promises behind the social policies and
political events of the period. These interdisciplinary concerns
provide, in turn, the framework for the analyses of works of
American literature that mirror their times and mores.
Novels considered include: B.F. Skinner and Walden Two (1948),
easily the most scandalous utopia of the century, if not of all
times; Ken Kesey's One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1962), an
anatomy of political disfranchisement American-style; Bernard
Malamud's God's Grace (1982), a neo-Darwinian beast fable about
morality in the thermonuclear age; Walker Percy's The Thanatos
Syndrome (1986), a diagnostic novel about engineering violence out
of America's streets and minds; and Philip Roth's The Plot Against
America (2004), an alternative history of homegrown ?soft?
fascism.
With the help of the five novels and the social models outlined
therein, Peter Swirski interrogates key aspects of sociobiology and
behavioural psychology, voting and referenda procedures, morality
and altruism, multilevel selection and proverbial wisdom, violence
and chip-implant technology, and the adaptive role of emotions in
our private and public lives.
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