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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars William Morris' futuristic utopia based on Medieval ideals
William Morris is best known for his involvement in the Pre-Raphaelite movement and as one of the greatest European pattern-designers since the Middle Ages. He was also a campaigning socialist, a pioneering environmentalist, and a lyric poet, as well as a journalist and a storyteller with a penchant for making his dreams reality. Much of his prose writings focused on the...
Published on May 16, 2006 by Lawrance M. Bernabo

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3.0 out of 5 stars Too Much Utopia
In order for a utopian novel to be worthwhile, it must be believable. William Morris's, "News from Nowhere" is not. The book is written in the form of a novel, but does not read like one. There is little story involved and thus it might have been better written as a monologue,dialogue, or essay.


In his novel Morris inserts "a Guest" into a future...
Published 7 months ago by Robert S Bogner


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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars William Morris' futuristic utopia based on Medieval ideals, May 16, 2006
William Morris is best known for his involvement in the Pre-Raphaelite movement and as one of the greatest European pattern-designers since the Middle Ages. He was also a campaigning socialist, a pioneering environmentalist, and a lyric poet, as well as a journalist and a storyteller with a penchant for making his dreams reality. Much of his prose writings focused on the theme of an earthly paradise, which is the subject of "News from Nowhere." First published in serial form in the "Commonweal" in 1890, this novella offers Morris' ideal future for England as a pastoral society born out of revolution. A true utopian vision of the future, it is largely forgotten in comparison to the dramatic dystopian works such as "Brave New World" and "Nineteen Eighty-Four," which have dominated the interest of scholars and students.

"News from Nowhere, or, An Epoch of Rest: being some chapters from a Utopian Romance" tells the story of a young Englishman who goes to bed one night in his London home and wakes up in a strange world where his "neighbors" talk about the year 2001 as thought it had happened in the past. Morris depicts an England where radical changes have altered not only the way things look but the key elements of the society, which is now structured according to the ideals of communism. This means a world without money or private property but with a perfect equality between all citizens who share in the daily labor.

In addition to these common features of a utopian society, Morris argues that labor would be regarded as a pleasure rather than as a chore. This is possible because in the ideal world Morris envisions every citizen does the job that matches their skills and is able to take pride in the fruit of their labors. Consequently, for Morris "work" is more akin to "art," specifically in terms of the Medieval idea of individual workmanship, where even the production of a dish was celebrated as an art form. Towards this end Morris creates a future where humanity has eliminated all but the simplest forms of machinery, forcing a reliance on the individual skins of the workman. Even the city of London becomes a collection of villages in this post-industrial utopia.

At one point an old man who had studied the revolution explains what happened, which is where "News from Nowhere" gives Morris the opportunity to comment on the injustices he perceives in his own society. The revolution came when the conflict between workers and the state became violent. Unions had banded together in larger organizations and when the establishment ordered unarmed protesters to be gunned down and the workers decided to fight back. In many ways the story Morris tells through his character clearly predicts some of the conflicts that would take place between labor and the state around the world in the decades to come, but there is also a strong affinity with the story of the French Revolution.

Ultimately, "News from Nowhere" is a combination of Morris' ideal of the Medieval workman as a happy artisan and his socialist beliefs. The irony for utopian scholarship is that while Morris was prompted by "Looking Backward" to write "News from Nowhere" as a refutation of Bellamy's reliance on the modern institutions of technology and complex organizations, but today the two works are seen as being kindred spirits because they both predict a brighter future for humanity. Still, it is became Morris is looking backward from the end of the 19th century to the past to find the ideal state that should be achieved in the future, that "News From Nowhere" is one of the most atypical examples of utopian literature.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars William Morris' futuristic utopia based on Medieval ideals, August 29, 2004
William Morris is best known for his involvement in the Pre-Raphaelite movement and as one of the greatest European pattern-designers since the Middle Ages. He was also a campaigning socialist, a pioneering environmentalist, and a lyric poet, as well as a journalist and a storyteller with a penchant for making his dreams reality. Much of his prose writings focused on the theme of an earthly paradise, which is the subject of "News from Nowhere." First published in serial form in the "Commonweal" in 1890, this novella offers Morris' ideal future for England as a pastoral society born out of revolution. A true utopian vision of the future, it is largely forgotten in comparison to the dramatic dystopian works such as "Brave New World" and "Nineteen Eighty-Four," which have dominated the interest of scholars and students.

"News from Nowhere, or, An Epoch of Rest: being some chapters from a Utopian Romance" tells the story of a young Englishman who goes to bed one night in his London home and wakes up in a strange world where his "neighbors" talk about the year 2001 as thought it had happened in the past. Morris depicts an England where radical changes have altered not only the way things look but the key elements of the society, which is now structured according to the ideals of communism. This means a world without money or private property but with a perfect equality between all citizens who share in the daily labor.

In addition to these common features of a utopian society, Morris argues that labor would be regarded as a pleasure rather than as a chore. This is possible because in the ideal world Morris envisions every citizen does the job that matches their skills and is able to take pride in the fruit of their labors. Consequently, for Morris "work" is more akin to "art," specifically in terms of the Medieval idea of individual workmanship, where even the production of a dish was celebrated as an art form. Towards this end Morris creates a future where humanity has eliminated all but the simplest forms of machinery, forcing a reliance on the individual skins of the workman. Even the city of London becomes a collection of villages in this post-industrial utopia.

At one point an old man who had studied the revolution explains what happened, which is where "News from Nowhere" gives Morris the opportunity to comment on the injustices he perceives in his own society. The revolution came when the conflict between workers and the state became violent. Unions had banded together in larger organizations and when the establishment ordered unarmed protesters to be gunned down and the workers decided to fight back. In many ways the story Morris tells through his character clearly predicts some of the conflicts that would take place between labor and the state around the world in the decades to come, but there is also a strong affinity with the story of the French Revolution.

Ultimately, "News from Nowhere" is a combination of Morris' ideal of the Medieval workman as a happy artisan and his socialist beliefs. The irony for utopian scholarship is that while Morris was prompted by "Looking Backward" to write "News from Nowhere" as a refutation of Bellamy's reliance on the modern institutions of technology and complex organizations, but today the two works are seen as being kindred spirits because they both predict a brighter future for humanity. Still, it is became Morris is looking backward from the end of the 19th century to the past to find the ideal state that should be achieved in the future, that "News From Nowhere" is one of the most atypical examples of utopian literature.



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3.0 out of 5 stars Too Much Utopia, June 27, 2011
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Robert S Bogner "Bogie" (Carbondale, Colorado, United States) - See all my reviews
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In order for a utopian novel to be worthwhile, it must be believable. William Morris's, "News from Nowhere" is not. The book is written in the form of a novel, but does not read like one. There is little story involved and thus it might have been better written as a monologue,dialogue, or essay.


In his novel Morris inserts "a Guest" into a future egalitarian, communist, London society, a society living in perfect harmony...it is an idealic, if unbelievable, setting. Morris pictures a Utopia in which all citizens are happy, beautiful people in love with their work and each other: although in most cases they are not performing meaningless, degrading, repetitive tasks...their love of work is unrealistic...as though they were drugged, happy idiots.

How this state was achieved is revealed by the Guest's conversations with various characters he meets in his travels. The conversations reveal Morris's convincing ideas concerning the evils of capitalism and its possible overthrough. The strength of his writing is most evident in these critical dialogues, however, when it comes to the forming a new society, Morris slips into thoughts of a dreamy, unrealistic, fairyland.

"News From Nowhere" is a book well worth reading for its critiques of capitalism, but falls short on its presentation of a realistic communist solution.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Looking Forward..., December 3, 2007
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News From Nowhere is William Morris's response to Looking Backwards by Edward Bellamy. Morris simply did not like the idea of state socialism that seemed to form the foundation for Bellamy's idea of a future socialist utopia. He wanted a decentralized and humane socialist future, where there was no private property and people enjoyed their work. Ideally, his story of a future society sounds wonderful and carefree, mostly because the idea of money, and bartering, has been removed from the human mindset all together. Yet while seems seem equal and everybody is happy, I couldn't help but notice that many of the cooks and those who waited on others during the meal times were women. And while men and women both seem to have a hand in manual labor, the old elders, who debated and talked about the past with the main character, were men. Like it or not, there is a hint of sexism in this future paradise of his. Also, having both books, I have to say that Edward Bellamy is a slightly better writer than William Morris, as he is more inclined to show us examples of his ideas. William Morris has the characters talk page, after page, showing us very little of this bright and wonderful future. Well, outside of showing us happy people rowing around, eating bread and camping outside.
It seems more like a mixture of socialist ideas mixed with dreams of a perfect farm life from long ago.
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News from Nowhere
News from Nowhere by William Morris (Paperback - October 22, 2008)
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