“Uprooted Peoples”
Title | “Uprooted Peoples” |
Year for Search | 1941 |
Authors | Wells, H[erbert] G[eorge](1866-1946) |
Tertiary Authors | Wells, H. G. |
Secondary Title | Guide to the New World: A Handbook of Constructive World Revolution |
Pagination | 94-95 |
Date Published | 1941 |
Publisher | Victor Gollancz |
Place Published | London |
Keywords | English author, Male author |
Annotation | Very brief eutopia of a post-war “Britain in a federal world, completely socialist and sharing a common freedom of all mankind. . .” while there remains a clear continuity with the past, but with what he calls “nomadism” (94). “In a federated world, political forms will cease to be territorial, will be subordinated [95] to world unionism and professionalism” (94-95). In the next essay, “Future Cities” (96-97), he says that in “The British Countryside in 1951” (92-93) and this essay, he was “trying to Imagine the face of the world in 1951, if civilisation wins the war” (92). |
Holding Institutions | PSt |
Author Note | (1866-1946) |
Full Text | 1941 Wells, H[erbert] G[eorge] (1866-1946). “Uprooted Peoples.” In his Guide to the New World: A Handbook of Constructive World Revolution (London: Victor Gollancz, 1941), 94-95. PSt Very brief eutopia of a post-war “Britain in a federal world, completely socialist and sharing a common freedom of all mankind. . .” while there remains a clear continuity with the past, but with what he calls “nomadism” (94). “In a federated world, political forms will cease to be territorial, will be subordinated [95] to world unionism and professionalism” (94-95). In the next essay, “Future Cities” (96-97), he says that in “The British Countryside in 1951” (92-93) and this essay, he was “trying to Imagine the face of the world in 1951, if civilisation wins the war” (92). |