Showing 141 - 160 results of 301 for search '"Thomas More"', query time: 0.65s Refine Results
  1. 141

    The Fantasy Method of Urban Design by Alan Marshall

    Published 2018-02-01
    “…In this article, the Fantasy Method is described through three case studies inspired by three influential texts: Utopia, by Thomas More (1516); Frankenstein, by Mary Shelley (1818); and The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, by Douglas Adams (1978). …”
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    Article
  2. 142

    The Fantasy Method of Urban Design by Alan Marshall

    Published 2018-02-01
    “…In this article, the Fantasy Method is described through three case studies inspired by three influential texts: Utopia, by Thomas More (1516); Frankenstein, by Mary Shelley (1818); and The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, by Douglas Adams (1978). …”
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    Article
  3. 143
  4. 144

    Utopia e (Des)encanto em Vivre à Madère de Jacques Chardonne by Ana Isabel Moniz

    Published 2009-06-01
    “…Is it possible that the island, in this case Madeira, may come close to the utopian idea of ‘ideal place’, in the wake of Thomas More or, on the contrary, is it the case that the protagonist, when visiting the island, will be confronted with an experience of disenchantment? …”
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    Article
  5. 145

    Presenting... utopia. by Fu, Tsz Ka.

    Published 2013
    “…The word “Utopia”, coined by Sir Thomas More in 1516, describes an imagined place or state of things in which everything is perfect. …”
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    Final Year Project (FYP)
  6. 146

    The climate of Utopia: Victorian hothouses and H. G. Wells by Lund, SE

    Published 2023
    “…Wells criticizes the idea inherited from Thomas More’s Utopia (1516) that ideal climate is static. …”
    Journal article
  7. 147
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  9. 149

    Cierto desvanecimiento de las utopías: Río Negro y los ideales partidarios en crisis / A fading of utopias: Río Negro and the crisis of political party ideals by Julieta Sartino

    Published 2017-03-01
    “…ABSTRACT This work is part of the commemoration of the 500 years of the work of Thomas More, Utopia. As most readers know, Utopia is set in the Renaissance, written in 1516, and describes, in broad terms, the ideal state of a republic, an issue that certainly proved to be part of the spirit of that epoch. …”
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    Article
  10. 150

    The Fantasy Method of Urban Design by Alan Marshall

    Published 2018-02-01
    “…In this article, the Fantasy Method is described through three case studies inspired by three influential texts: Utopia, by Thomas More (1516); Frankenstein, by Mary Shelley (1818); and The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, by Douglas Adams (1978). …”
    Get full text
    Article
  11. 151

    Hand D and Shakespeare’s Unorthodox Literary Paper Trail by Diana Price

    Published 2016-03-01
    “…A case in point is the theory that Shakespeare wrote the Hand D Additions in the Sir Thomas More manuscript. That theory is now part of received scholarship, even though many of the assumptions and arguments first published in 1923 have been challenged. …”
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    Article
  12. 152

    Rivers of Scarcity. Utopian water regimes and flows against the current by Rutgerd Boelens

    Published 2022-07-01
    “… Utopians organized space, nature and society to perfection, including land and water governance -- rescuing society from deep-rooted crisis: “The happiest basis for a civilized community, to be universally adopted” (Thomas More, 1516). These days, similarly, well-intended utopian water governance regimes suggest radical transformations to combat the global Water Crisis, controlling deviant natures and humans. …”
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    Article
  13. 153

    Islands and the Offshoring Possibilities and Strategies of Contemporary States: Insights On/for the Migration Phenomenon on Europe’s Southern Flank by Godfrey Baldacchino

    Published 2014-05-01
    “…As we approach the 500th anniversary of Thomas More’s Utopia (1516), this paper explores these ideas in relation to the migration phenomenon on Europe’s southern flank. …”
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    Article
  14. 154

    The Fantasy Method of Urban Design by Alan Marshall

    Published 2018-02-01
    “…In this article, the Fantasy Method is described through three case studies inspired by three influential texts: Utopia, by Thomas More (1516); Frankenstein, by Mary Shelley (1818); and The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, by Douglas Adams (1978). …”
    Get full text
    Article
  15. 155

    A tradição luciânica numa utopia francesa do século XVII by Ana Cláudia Romano Ribeiro

    Published 2012-12-01
    “…In 1516 Thomas More published Utopia, adding to literature a new literary genre, essentially satirical. …”
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    Article
  16. 156

    L’immaginario dell’utopia moderna nella figura del Don Chisciotte by Monica Musolino

    Published 2022-02-01
    “…In particular, we have intertwined the form of the modern novel inaugurated by Cervantes (in two volumes in 1605 and 1615) with another literary genre that opens Modernity and which is founded by Thomas More's Utopia, in 1516. These two forms of the narrative imagination allow to understand the modern age through two imaginary forms that will become paradigms of its most widespread imaginary: Don Quixote and utopia. …”
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  17. 157

    Tolerance in Utopian Discourse by Monika Brzóstowicz-Klajn

    Published 2022-07-01
    “…In this article, the problem of tolerance is discussed with regard to some of the most important utopias in the European tradition, namely by Thomas More, Tommaso Campanella, and Francis Bacon. …”
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  18. 158
  19. 159

    The Fantasy Method of Urban Design by Alan Marshall

    Published 2018-02-01
    “…In this article, the Fantasy Method is described through three case studies inspired by three influential texts: Utopia, by Thomas More (1516); Frankenstein, by Mary Shelley (1818); and The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, by Douglas Adams (1978). …”
    Get full text
    Article
  20. 160

    AN OITOCENTIST UTOPIA: EQUALITY, LABOR AND STATE IN A SOCIETY IMAGINATED BY EDWARD BELLAMY by José D'Assunção Barros

    Published 2017-12-01
    “…These more specific analyse is preceded by a brief introduction to utopian literature since the XVI century – recovering comparatively propositions of authors such as Thomas More, Campanella, Francis Bacon, Fourier, Saint-Simon, and Robert Owen – , besides a theoric discussion about the models of equality distribution, in this case considering the reflections of Norberto Bobbio and Amartya Sen on this topic. …”
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    Article