Communication and the Construction of the Ideal in the West

This dissertation examines the conceptualization of the ideal society in Western culture in relation to changes in communication modes. The utopian discourse is defined by a concern with the relationship between language and reality. I explore this concern as a reflection of the theoretical disposit...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Dragomir, Adriana
Other Authors: LeBlanc, Julie
Language:en_ca
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/42487
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OTU.1807-424872013-12-03T03:38:51ZCommunication and the Construction of the Ideal in the WestDragomir, Adrianautopian literatureutopian thoughtcommunication changeideal societysymbolic thoughtliteracyPlatoThomas MoreSt.AugustineFrancois RabelaisFrancis Bacon029507080422This dissertation examines the conceptualization of the ideal society in Western culture in relation to changes in communication modes. The utopian discourse is defined by a concern with the relationship between language and reality. I explore this concern as a reflection of the theoretical disposition invited by changes in communication modes, which are perceived as crises of representation. Plato and Thomas More’s enlightened communities in the Republic and Utopia reflect comparable idealistic perspectives on education. In my view, this optimism stems from the social reality of growing literacies with the advent of the alphabet and printing, respectively. I contend that these writers are animated by an ethical impulse to teach their readers that language is representation. From the vantage point of this knowledge, each individual may employ language symbolically in order to create and perpetuate a moral and spiritual mode of thought. I argue that the discourse of the ideal is the symbolic expression of humanity’s engagement with death, the ultimate existential concern made acute by the aspect of historical discontinuity in the crisis of representation. Plato and More exhibit comparable efforts to open to their readers the superior space of critical reflexivity which they themselves inhabit. From this conceptual, pre-representational space of conscious choice, language is subjected to achieving spiritual progress. I introduce the concept of post-utopia, which describes a pragmatic moment when the relationship between author and the ideal society is brought into the foreground and reinforced as a way of addressing concerns with textual authority. I examine these developments in Augustine’s De Civitate Dei, François Rabelais’s episode of the Abbaye de Thélème in Gargantua, and Francis Bacon’s New Atlantis. These authors draw on the ideologies of representation inherent in utopian discourse, and position the authorial figure as link between scriptural teleology and history, ensuring spiritual and societal betterment in the textual cultures of late antiquity and early modernity. The figure of the author emerges as a symbol of history and of man’s ability to assume the limits of the mind and of language.LeBlanc, Julie2012-032013-11-15T22:11:02ZWITHHELD_ONE_YEAR2013-11-15T22:11:02Z2013-11-15Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/42487en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic utopian literature
utopian thought
communication change
ideal society
symbolic thought
literacy
Plato
Thomas More
St.Augustine
Francois Rabelais
Francis Bacon
0295
0708
0422
spellingShingle utopian literature
utopian thought
communication change
ideal society
symbolic thought
literacy
Plato
Thomas More
St.Augustine
Francois Rabelais
Francis Bacon
0295
0708
0422
Dragomir, Adriana
Communication and the Construction of the Ideal in the West
description This dissertation examines the conceptualization of the ideal society in Western culture in relation to changes in communication modes. The utopian discourse is defined by a concern with the relationship between language and reality. I explore this concern as a reflection of the theoretical disposition invited by changes in communication modes, which are perceived as crises of representation. Plato and Thomas More’s enlightened communities in the Republic and Utopia reflect comparable idealistic perspectives on education. In my view, this optimism stems from the social reality of growing literacies with the advent of the alphabet and printing, respectively. I contend that these writers are animated by an ethical impulse to teach their readers that language is representation. From the vantage point of this knowledge, each individual may employ language symbolically in order to create and perpetuate a moral and spiritual mode of thought. I argue that the discourse of the ideal is the symbolic expression of humanity’s engagement with death, the ultimate existential concern made acute by the aspect of historical discontinuity in the crisis of representation. Plato and More exhibit comparable efforts to open to their readers the superior space of critical reflexivity which they themselves inhabit. From this conceptual, pre-representational space of conscious choice, language is subjected to achieving spiritual progress. I introduce the concept of post-utopia, which describes a pragmatic moment when the relationship between author and the ideal society is brought into the foreground and reinforced as a way of addressing concerns with textual authority. I examine these developments in Augustine’s De Civitate Dei, François Rabelais’s episode of the Abbaye de Thélème in Gargantua, and Francis Bacon’s New Atlantis. These authors draw on the ideologies of representation inherent in utopian discourse, and position the authorial figure as link between scriptural teleology and history, ensuring spiritual and societal betterment in the textual cultures of late antiquity and early modernity. The figure of the author emerges as a symbol of history and of man’s ability to assume the limits of the mind and of language.
author2 LeBlanc, Julie
author_facet LeBlanc, Julie
Dragomir, Adriana
author Dragomir, Adriana
author_sort Dragomir, Adriana
title Communication and the Construction of the Ideal in the West
title_short Communication and the Construction of the Ideal in the West
title_full Communication and the Construction of the Ideal in the West
title_fullStr Communication and the Construction of the Ideal in the West
title_full_unstemmed Communication and the Construction of the Ideal in the West
title_sort communication and the construction of the ideal in the west
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/42487
work_keys_str_mv AT dragomiradriana communicationandtheconstructionoftheidealinthewest
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