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Joel Sternfeld: Sweet Earth: Experimental Utopias in America [SIGNED]

Publisher: Göttingen, Germany: Steidl Verlag, 2006
Edition: 1st Edition
Binding: Hardcover
ISBN: 3865211240
Condition: Fine / Fine
Item #: 113663

$250.00

Specifics

First edition, first printing. Signed in black ink on title page by Sternfeld. Hardcover. Tan cloth-covered boards with title stamped in black on spine, with photographically illustrated dust jacket. Photographs and text by Joel Sternfeld. Project editor Jennifer McCharen. Book edited by Donna Wingate. Includes a bibliography and list of resources for more information on experimental communities. Designed by Steidl Design/Bernard Fischer. 136 pp., with 60 four-color plates printed on thick matt stock. 11 1/8 x 13 1/2 inches.

Condition

Fine in Fine dust jacket. A Mint copy.

Description

From the publisher: "When Thomas More wrote Utopia in 1516 he gave a name to a very old, perhaps universal, tradition of thinking that included the Epic of Gilgamesh, Plato's Republic and the Old Testament -- and he started an argument. Francis Bacon (utopia through Science) and Jean Jacques Rousseau (utopia through Nature) soon joined the debate, but it was the harsh changes in daily life engendered by the factory systems of the early Industrial Revolution that brought an urgency to the discussion, as seen in the writings of David Owens, Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels. While the early social theorists were largely European, it was in the fluid environment of America that true utopian communities were built and utopian experimentation flourished. In the years between 1810 and 1850, hundreds of secular and religious societies bravely tried to build a 'perfect' life for their members. In the twentieth century experimentation began again, reaching a fever pitch in the turbulent days of the Vietnam War. Some of the late 1960s communes still survive and continue to flourish. The 1990s and the early years of the new millennium have become yet another hotbed of social experimentation. The Co-Housing movement is sweeping America with at least 70 communities fully completed and occupied and numerous others planned. At the same time, the rapid global expansion of sustainable communities known as Ecovillages has been widely adopted in America. Joel Sternfeld has selected sixty representative historic or present American utopias. A photograph of each is accompanied by a brief text that summarizes the most salient aspects of the history or organization of the community. Neither a conventional history nor a conventional book of photography, Sweet Earth brings together what might otherwise seem disparate, individualized social phenomena and makes visible the community of communities. As laissez-faire market forces sweep the globe and the earth's future seems endangered, the dream of living in concert with nature and with one another is increasingly essential."