Nistler CoBPA Faculty Research

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Dr. Mark Jendrysik, Professor of Political Science and Public Administration, new book “Utopia” will be released April 27 on Amazon

Please join us in congratulating Dr. Mark Jendrysik, Professor or Political Science and Public Administration for his new book Utopia that will be released April 27 on Amazon.

Human beings universally dream of a better world. For centuries they have expressed their yearning for ways of life that are free from oppression, want and fear through philosophy, art, film and literature.

In this concise and engaging book, Mark Jendrysik examines the multifarious ways utopians have posed the question of how human beings might establish justice and realize truly human values. Drawing upon a range of sources, from Plato’s Republic and Thomas More’s Utopia to Ursula Le Guin’s The Dispossessed, he argues that, though for many utopia means “demanding the impossible,” the goals that seemed out of reach for one generation are often realized in the next. Nonetheless, he shows that, while utopian thought points toward our most noble aspirations, it also illustrates the dangers of totalitarianism, the surveillance state and global climate change.

This engaging book will be an invaluable guide for anyone seeking to understand how, for good or ill, utopian aspirations shape our lives, even in times that seem designed to close off dreams of a better world.

Scholars say:

“This is a lively and perceptive survey of the most important texts in and leading interpretations of the utopian tradition. Jendrysik’s account is punchy, direct and accessible and helps bring utopia to life for twenty-first-century readers.”  – Gregory Claeys, Royal Holloway & Bedford New College, University of London

“What makes an eminently student-friendly introduction? Jendrysik’s answer: accessible writing, concise overviews, apt quotes, interconnections among texts, provocative concluding propositions combined with an honest clarification of focus; political thought grounded in the Western canon with a leaning toward egalitarianism and libertarianism.” – Kenneth Roemer, University of Texas at Arlington

 

[Hardback 978-15095-3492-0  Paperback 978-15095-3493-7]