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Percy Bysshe Shelley's utopian vision was largely a product of the
tumultuous final quarter of the eighteenth century, when the
American, French, and industrial revolutions profoundly changed the
way in which social, political, and economic relationships were
viewed. In A Brighter Morn, noted Shelley scholars identify the
qualities of this unique brand of utopianism, which was a complex
and frequently conflicted blend of the personal, poetical, and
political realms. This collection of essays sorts through these
perplexities and discords, exploring Shelleyan utopianism in a
variety of contexts- place and placelessness, time and
timelessness, publicity and privacy, and physicality and
spirituality- and concluding with a snapshot of the Western psyche
at a crucial point in its development.
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