Looking Backward: 2000-1887 (Signet Classics)
Looking Backward: 2000-1887 (Signet Classics) book cover

Looking Backward: 2000-1887 (Signet Classics)

Mass Market Paperback – January 6, 2009

Price
$5.95
Publisher
Signet
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0451531162
Dimensions
4.17 x 0.66 x 6.7 inches
Weight
4.4 ounces

Description

Edward Bellamy (1850-1898)xa0was admitted to the bar in 1871, but that same year he abandoned his practice to become associate editor of the Springfield Union (Massachusetts). Later, he worked as an editorial writer for the New York Evening Post . Bellamy’s heart was no more in newspaper work than it had been in the law. His main interest lay in the field of literature. He wrote several short stories and three novels, including Dr. Heidenhoff’s Process (1880), before he married Emma Sanderson in 1882. Forced by ill health to give up his editorial career, Bellamy devoted himself to writing. His novel Miss Ludington’s Sister was published in 1884. The young author’s intense awareness of injustices in the economic and social systems, as well as his desire for reforms, impelled him to write Looking Backward in 1888. “Bellamy Clubs” sprang up across the nation and the novelist embarked on a series of lecture tours and speaking engagements. In 1891, he founded the New Nation , a Boston newspaper, as an organ for his views, but increasing illness forced him to suspend publication. He continued, however, to work on the sequel to Looking Backward . It was published under the title Equality in 1897. Walter James Miller —poet, playwright, critic, translator—has authored, co-authored, or edited 64 books, scores of scholarly articles, and hundreds of television and radio programs. Professor of English at New York University, he has won a writing fellowship from the New York Foundation for the Arts/ Ruttenberg Foundation. Eliot Fintushel writes novels and short stories in and around the genre of science fiction and is a contributing editor to Tricycle magazine.xa0Away from the word processor, he is also a busker and a traveling showman, a two-time winner of the National Endowment's Fellowship for Solo Performance Artists.

Features & Highlights

  • Edward Bellamy’s prophetic novel about a young Boston man who is mysteriously transported from the 19th to the 21st century—from a world of war and want to a world of peace and plenty.
  • The year is 2000. The place: Utopian America. The hero: anyone who has ever longed for escape to a better life…
  • Translated into more than twenty languages, and the most widely read novel of its time,
  • Looking Backward
  • is more than a brilliant visionary’s view of the future. It is a blueprint of the “perfect society,” a guidebook that stimulated some of the greatest thinkers of our age. Today—in the very era it attempted to visualize—it is even more compelling than ever.
  • With an Introduction by Walter James Miller
  • And an Afterword by Eliot Fintushel

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(111)
★★★★
25%
(93)
★★★
15%
(56)
★★
7%
(26)
23%
(85)

Most Helpful Reviews

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I didn't like it much

This book takes place in the future, an ideal socialist world in which everyone is treated the same.

This book genuinely holds up the idea of socialism to the very last page. Something that absolutely irked me about it is how even this book, written before George Orwell was already forecasting "some of us are more equal than others".

The author begins by describing a young man in the 19th century who sleeps into the future and retains his current state. He there finds a doctor who's bent on mocking his barbaric culture of the past. The doctor describes a "utopia" in which every man works, no one is exempt from the working force. Sounds fair until you read a bit further....

When an author prints a successful book, they are then exempt from service. They are excused from the working class. Even further, when you read about the politics the author deems the working class incapable of electing the President. Only the elite are capable of making that decision, which includes these successful authors. What a nice little utopia the author has dug out for himself.

Edward Bellamy wrote this novel in a time of civil unrest, at a time when the classes were fighting amongst easy other. He deemed it very possible that his ideas may be implemented. Personally I think he was being very opportunistic. People of this era were looking for new means a of social class, so Edward handed them something he knew they would see as a fair solution.

I think this book, by attempting to uphold socialism really shows why you it always inevitably fails. People are greedy and corrupted, and an all controlling system like this just invites people to take advantage of it.

If you read this novel, prepare for a sneering tone and a mockery of typical culture. Rather hypocritical of the author really, he mocks people of wanting to take advantage of situations for their personal gain, yet at the same time, that's precisely what he did with this novel.
14 people found this helpful