Newtopia; The World We Want
Title | Newtopia; The World We Want |
Year for Search | 1941 |
Authors | Wilson, Philip Whitewell |
Date Published | 1941 |
Publisher | Charles Scribner's Sons |
Place Published | New York |
Keywords | English author, Male author |
Annotation | Eutopia. Newtopians are average people who are mostly focused on their homes. Most of the book is on current conditions and the war in particular. The eutopian aspects of the book focus on the conditions that will allow people to lead a decent life. International unity is one such condition, and the author refers to 1939 Streit. Reformed capitalism. Christian but more generally religious. |
Holding Institutions | MoU-St, PSt |
Author Note | The author was an editor of The Railway Herald, a union newspaper, a Liberal Member of Parliament from 1906 to 1910, and then a journalist, first for The London Daily Times and then The New York Times. |
Full Text | 1941 Wilson, Philip Whitewell. Newtopia; The World We Want. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons. MoU-St, PSt Eutopia. Newtopians are average people who are mostly focused on their homes. Most of the book is on current conditions and the war in particular. The eutopian aspects of the book focus on the conditions that will allow people to lead a decent life. International unity is one such condition, and the author refers to 1939 Streit. Reformed capitalism. Christian but more generally religious. The author was an editor of The Railway Herald, a union newspaper, a Liberal Member of Parliament from 1906 to 1910, and then a journalist, first for The London Daily Times and then The New York Times. |