J. W. Roberts (3) (1824–1900)
Autor(a) de Looking Within: The Misleading Tendencies of "Looking Backward" Made Manifest
Para outros autores com o nome J. W. Roberts, ver a página de desambiguação.
Obras por J. W. Roberts
Etiquetado
Conhecimento Comum
- Nome legal
- Roberts, John Wesley
- Data de nascimento
- 1824
- Data de falecimento
- 1900-10
- Sexo
- male
- Nacionalidade
- USA
- Local de nascimento
- Waynesville, Ohio, USA
- Local de falecimento
- Oskaloosa, Kansas, USA
Membros
Críticas
Estatísticas
- Obras
- 1
- Membros
- 4
- Popularidade
- #1,536,815
- Críticas
- 1
- ISBN
- 24
Society breaks down because Mr. North is right, of course, and a new society is implemented, without all that dangerous equality stuff, which is just a slippery slope to "requir[ing] personal equality shall extend to personal appearance, dress, education, and all else" (229). And what if they let the coloreds in on this whole equality thing? Well, don't worry, regress 'em back to slavery and they'll be in their natural place again. Just make it an enlightened one this time. Looking Backward might be wrong-headed, but at least it's trying; Looking Within is pretty explicitly arguing: 'The best political system is the one that benefits me, the writer, in the present, just with some of the rough edges worn off.' The future folks explicitly readopt nineteenth-century values after everything falls apart. It's repellently short-sighted.
All that said, Roberts gets-- unlike Bellamy-- that the massive changes of the year 2000 wouldn't just spontaneously happen. Roberts depicts a massive air war in the year 1927 that is nothing but slaughter and carnage because when you fly an air-ship, no one can escape your wrath, and soon total war means that there's nothing left to fight over. 1893 was a good year for air war: this is the fourth novel published that year I can think of that depicts a bloody aerial conflict, and in every case, it's a precursor to social change.… (mais)