"Looking Backward", by Edward Bellamy

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Project Gutenberg Canada eBook of "Looking Backward", by Edwa... http://www.gutenberg.org/files/25439/25439-h/25439-h.htm [Pg i]ii]iii]iv]v]vi]vii]viii]ix]x]xi]xii]xiii]xiv]xv]xvi]xvii]xviii]xix]xx]7]8]9]10]11]12]13]14]15]16]17]18]19]20]21]22]23]24]25]26]27]28]29]30]31]32]33]34]35]36]37]38]39]40]41]42]43]44]45]46]47]48]49]50]51]52]53]54]55]56]57]59]58]60]61]62]63]64]65]66]67]68]69]70]71]72]73]74]75]76]77]78]79]80]81]82]83]84]85]86]87]88]89]90]91]92]93]94]95]96]97]98]99]100]101]102]103]104]105]106]107]108]109]110]111]112]113]114]115]116]117]118]119]120]121]122]123]124]125]126]127]128]129]130]131]132]133]134]135]136]137]138]139]140]141]142]143]144]145]146]147]148]149]150]151]152]153]154]155]156]157]158]159]160]161]162]163]164]165]166]167]168]169]170]171]172]173]174]175]176]177]178]179]180]181]182]183]184]185]186]187]188]189]190]191]192]193]194]195]196]197]198]199]200]201]202]203]204]205]206]207]208]209]210]211]212]213]214]215]216]217]218]219]220]221]222]223]224]225]226]227]228]229]230]231]232]233]234]235]236]237]238]239]240]241]242]243]244]245]246]247]248]249]250]251]252]253]254]255]256]257]258]259]260]261]262]263]264]265]266]267]268]269]270]271]272]273]274]275]276]277]278]279]280]281]282]283]284]285]286]287]288]289]290]291]292]293]294]295]296]297]298]299]300]301]302]303]304]305]306]307]308]309]310]311]312]313]314]315]316]317]318]319]320]321]322]323]324]325]326]327]328]329]330]331]332]333]334]335]336]337] The Project Gutenberg EBook of Looking Backward, by Edward Bellamy This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net Title: Looking Backward 2000-1887 Author: Edward Bellamy Release Date: May 12, 2008 [EBook #25439] Language: English Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOOKING BACKWARD *** Produced by Jana Srna, David T. Jones, Alexander Bauer & the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdpcanada.net. (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive.) THE Looking Backward 1 of 145 9/25/2011 12:07 AM The Project Gutenberg Canada eBook of "Looking Backward", by Edwa... http://www.gutenberg.org/files/25439/25439-h/25439-h.htm 2000—1887 By EDWARD BELLAMY BOSTON AND NEW YORK HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY The Riverside Press Cambridge COPYRIGHT , 1887, BY TICKNOR AND COMPANY COPYRIGHT , 1889, BY EDWARD BELLAMY COPYRIGHT , 1898, 1915, AND 1917, BY EMMA A. BELLAMY ALL RIGHTS RESERVED INTRODUCTION i THE AUTHOR OF "LOOKING BACKWARD" v AUTHOR'S PREFACE xix CHAPTER I 7 CHAPTER II 20 CHAPTER III 27 CHAPTER IV 39 CHAPTER V 47 CHAPTER VI 59 CHAPTER VII 63 CHAPTER VIII 76 2 of 145 9/25/2011 12:07 AM The Project Gutenberg Canada eBook of "Looking Backward", by Edwa... http://www.gutenberg.org/files/25439/25439-h/25439-h.htm CHAPTER IX 85 CHAPTER X 100 CHAPTER XI 110 CHAPTER XII 123 CHAPTER XIII 138 CHAPTER XIV 151 CHAPTER XV 160 CHAPTER XVI 172 CHAPTER XVII 180 CHAPTER XVIII 195 CHAPTER XIX 199 CHAPTER XX 210 CHAPTER XXI 216 CHAPTER XXII 225 CHAPTER XXIII 245 CHAPTER XXIV 251 CHAPTER XXV 255 CHAPTER XXVI 271 CHAPTER XXVII 293 CHAPTER XXVIII 307 POSTSCRIPT 333 INTRODUCTION BY HEYWOOD BROUN A good many of my radical friends express a certain kindly condescension when they speak of Edward Bellamy's "Looking Backward." "Of course you know," they say, "that it really isn't first-rate economics." And yet in further conversation I have known a very large number of these same somewhat scornful Socialists to admit, "You know, the first thing that got me started to thinking about Socialism was Bellamy's 'Looking Backward.'" From the beginning it has been a highly provocative book. It is now. Many of the questions both of mood and technique are even more pertinent in the year 1931 than they were in 1887. A critic of the Boston Transcript said, when the novel first appeared, that the new State imagined by Bellamy was all very well, but that the author lost much of his effectiveness by putting his Utopia a scant fifty years ahead, and that he might much better have made it seventy-five centuries. 3 of 145 9/25/2011 12:07 AM The Project Gutenberg Canada eBook of "Looking Backward", by Edwa... http://www.gutenberg.org/files/25439/25439-h/25439-h.htm It is true that the fifty years assigned for changing the world utterly are almost gone by now. Not everything which was predicted in "Looking Backward" has come to pass. But the laugh is not against Bellamy, but against his critic. Some of the things which must have seemed most improbable of all to the Transcript man of 1887 are now actually in being. In one respect Edward Bellamy set down a picture of modern American life which is almost a hundred per cent realized. It startled me to read the passage in which Edith shows the musical schedule to Julian West, and tells him to choose which selection he wishes to have brought through the air into the music room. It is true that Bellamy imagined this broadcasting to be done over telephone wires, as is indeed the case to-day in some phases of national hook-ups. But consider this quotation: "He [Dr. Leete] showed how, by turning a screw, the volume of the music could be made to fill the room, or die away to an echo so faint and far that one could scarcely be sure whether he heard or imagined it." That might almost have been lifted bodily from an article in some newspaper radio column. But Bellamy did see with clear vision things and factors much more important than the possibility of hearing a sermon without going to church. Much which is now established in Soviet Russia bears at least a likeness to the industrial army visioned in this prophetic book. However, Communism can scarcely claim Bellamy as its own, for he emphasizes repeatedly the non-violent features of the revolution which he imagined. Indeed, at one point he argues that the left-wingers of his own day impeded change by the very excesses of their technical philosophy. There is in his book no acceptance of a transitional stage of class dictatorship. He sees the change coming through a general recognition of the failings of the capitalist system. Indeed, he sees a point in economic development where capitalism may not even be good enough for the capitalist. To the strict Marxian Socialist this is profound and ridiculous heresy. To me it does not seem fantastic. And things have happened in the world already which were not dreamt of in Karl Marx's philosophy. The point I wish to stress is the prevalent notion that all radical movements in America stem from the writings of foreign authors. Now, Bellamy, of course, was familiar with the pioneer work of Marx. And that part of it which he liked he took over. Nevertheless, he developed a contribution which was entirely his own. It is irrelevant to say that, after all, the two men differed largely in their view of the technique by which the new world was to be accomplished. A difference in technique, as Trotzky knows to his sorrow, may be as profound as a difference in principle. Bellamy was essentially a New-Englander. His background was that of Boston and its remote suburbs. And when he preaches the necessity of the coöperative commonwealth, he does it with a Yankee twang. In fact, he is as essentially native American as Norman Thomas, the present leader of the Socialist Party in this country. I cannot confess any vast interest in the love story which serves as a thread for Bellamy's 4 of 145 9/25/2011 12:07 AM The Project Gutenberg Canada eBook of "Looking Backward", by Edwa... http://www.gutenberg.org/files/25439/25439-h/25439-h.htm vision of a reconstructed society. But it can be said that it is so palpably a thread of sugar crystal that it need not get in the way of any reader. I am among those who first became interested in Socialism through reading "Looking Backward" when I was a freshman in college. It came in the first half-year of a course which was designed to prove that all radical panaceas were fundamentally unsound in their conception. The professor played fair. He gave us the arguments for the radical cause in the fall and winter, and proceeded to demolish them in spring and early summer. But what one learns in the winter sticks more than words uttered in the warmth of drowsy May and June.
Recommended publications
  • Using Digital Libraries: Search Strategies for Family Historians
    Using Digital Libraries: Search Strategies for Family Historians Elizabeth M. O’Neal PO Box 1259, Lompoc, CA 93436 [email protected] https://www.swangenealogy.net https://mydescendantsancestors.com Looking for books about your family history? You may be able to find them without leaving the comfort of your home! Millions of books have already been digitized and are free to use, as well as download to your personal library. Learn where to find the best digital book collections, how to strategically search them, and how to save your finds to your computer or cloud storage for later reference. Digital Libraries – Family History FamilySearch Digital Library - https://www.familysearch.org/library/books The newly-updated FamilySearch Digital Library contains more than 440,000 digitized genealogy and family history books and publications from the archives of family history libraries such as the Allen County Public Library, the Family History Library in Salt Lake City, and others. Included in the collection are family histories, county and local histories, genealogy magazines and how-to books, gazetteers, medieval histories and pedigrees. While some books are only viewable in a Family History Center, many can be viewed from – as well as downloaded to – your home computer. To access the FamilySearch Digital Library, visit FamilySearch.org, and click “Search” in the top menu. In the drop-down menu, select “Books.” On the home page of the digital library, you will see a simple search bar. Here, you can type in a surname, historical events, groups of people, or names of places. A search will cover every word of text.
    [Show full text]
  • American Political Thought: Readings and Materials Keith E. Whittington
    American Political Thought: Readings and Materials Keith E. Whittington Index of Materials for Companion Website 2. The Colonial Era, Before 1776 II. Democracy and Liberty John Adams, Letter to James Sullivan (1776) John Cotton, The Bloudy Tenent Washed and Made White (1647) John Cotton, Letter to Lord Say and Seal (1636) Jacob Duche, The Duty of Standing Fast in Our Spiritual and Temporal Liberties (1775) Massachusetts Body of Liberties (1641) James Otis, Rights of the British Colony Asserted and Proved (1764) Elisha Williams, The Essential Rights and Liberties of Protestants (1744) Roger Williams, The Bloudy Tenent Yet More Bloudy (1652) John Winthrop, Arbitrary Government Described (1644) John Winthrop, A Defense of an Order of Court (1637) John Winthrop, Defense of the Negative Vote (1643) III. Citizenship and Community Agreement among the Settlers of Exeter, New Hampshire (1639) Combination of the Inhabitants of the Piscataqua River for Government (1641) Robert Cushman, The Sin and Danger of Self-Love (1621) Fundamental Agreement, or Original Constitution of the Colony of New Haven (1639) Fundamental Orders of Connecticut (1639) Patrick Henry, Give Me Liberty Speech (1775) William Livingston, “The Vanity of Birth and Titles” (1753) Oath of a Freeman in Massachusetts Bay (1632) Thomas Tryon, The Planter’s Speech to His Neighbors and Countrymen (1684) IV. Equality and Status Address of the Mechanics of New York City (1776) Jonathan Boucher, Sermon on the Peace (1763) Charles Inglis, The True Interest of America (1776) William Knox, Three Tracts Respecting the Conversion (1768) William Byrd, Letter to Lord Egmont (1736) Samuel Sewall, The Selling of Joseph (1700) John Saffin, A Brief and Candid Answer (1701) John Woolman Some Considerations on Keeping Negroes (1762) V.
    [Show full text]
  • The Salon of Mabel Dodge
    DIVISION OF THE HUMANITIES AND SOCIAL SCIENCES CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY PASADENA, CALIFORNIA 91125 THE SALON OF MABEL DODGE Robert A. Rosenstone To be published in Peter Quennell, ed., Salon (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1980). HUMANITIES WORKING PAPER 24 January 1979 THE SALON OF ~WillEL DODGE Robert A. Rosenstone Mabel Dodge's salon ••• burst upon New York like a rocket. Margaret Sanger It was the only successful salon I have ever seen in America. Lincoln Steffens Many famous salons have been established by women of wit or beauty; Mabel's was the only one ever established by pure will power. And it was no second-rate salon; everybody in the ferment of ideas could be found there. Max Eastman 2 It is indeed the happy woman who has no history, for by happy we mean the loving and beloved, and by history we designate all those relatable occurences on earth caused by the human energies seeking other outlets than the biological one. • . That I have so many pages to write signifies, solely, that I was unlucky in love. Most of the pages are about what I did instead •. Mabel Dodge 1 Mabel Dodge was rich and attractive and more than a little lucky. For two years -- from 1912 to 1914 -- she played hostess to the most famous and no doubt the most interesting salon in American history. This success was no accident, but the result of a subtle interplay between her individual needs and ambitions and the historical moment. It was a very special period in the cultural life of the United States, one when expatriate Irish painter John Butler Yeats cocked an ear and heard "the fiddles • tuning as it were allover America.
    [Show full text]
  • Markets Not Capitalism Explores the Gap Between Radically Freed Markets and the Capitalist-Controlled Markets That Prevail Today
    individualist anarchism against bosses, inequality, corporate power, and structural poverty Edited by Gary Chartier & Charles W. Johnson Individualist anarchists believe in mutual exchange, not economic privilege. They believe in freed markets, not capitalism. They defend a distinctive response to the challenges of ending global capitalism and achieving social justice: eliminate the political privileges that prop up capitalists. Massive concentrations of wealth, rigid economic hierarchies, and unsustainable modes of production are not the results of the market form, but of markets deformed and rigged by a network of state-secured controls and privileges to the business class. Markets Not Capitalism explores the gap between radically freed markets and the capitalist-controlled markets that prevail today. It explains how liberating market exchange from state capitalist privilege can abolish structural poverty, help working people take control over the conditions of their labor, and redistribute wealth and social power. Featuring discussions of socialism, capitalism, markets, ownership, labor struggle, grassroots privatization, intellectual property, health care, racism, sexism, and environmental issues, this unique collection brings together classic essays by Cleyre, and such contemporary innovators as Kevin Carson and Roderick Long. It introduces an eye-opening approach to radical social thought, rooted equally in libertarian socialism and market anarchism. “We on the left need a good shake to get us thinking, and these arguments for market anarchism do the job in lively and thoughtful fashion.” – Alexander Cockburn, editor and publisher, Counterpunch “Anarchy is not chaos; nor is it violence. This rich and provocative gathering of essays by anarchists past and present imagines society unburdened by state, markets un-warped by capitalism.
    [Show full text]
  • The Place of the Intellectual in Mark Twain's and Edward Bellamy's Visions of Distant Societies
    Magic and the great trust : the place of the intellectual in Mark Twain's and Edward Bellamy's visions of distant societies Autor(en): Heim, Otto Objekttyp: Article Zeitschrift: SPELL : Swiss papers in English language and literature Band (Jahr): 10 (1997) PDF erstellt am: 11.10.2021 Persistenter Link: http://doi.org/10.5169/seals-99948 Nutzungsbedingungen Die ETH-Bibliothek ist Anbieterin der digitalisierten Zeitschriften. Sie besitzt keine Urheberrechte an den Inhalten der Zeitschriften. Die Rechte liegen in der Regel bei den Herausgebern. Die auf der Plattform e-periodica veröffentlichten Dokumente stehen für nicht-kommerzielle Zwecke in Lehre und Forschung sowie für die private Nutzung frei zur Verfügung. Einzelne Dateien oder Ausdrucke aus diesem Angebot können zusammen mit diesen Nutzungsbedingungen und den korrekten Herkunftsbezeichnungen weitergegeben werden. Das Veröffentlichen von Bildern in Print- und Online-Publikationen ist nur mit vorheriger Genehmigung der Rechteinhaber erlaubt. Die systematische Speicherung von Teilen des elektronischen Angebots auf anderen Servern bedarf ebenfalls des schriftlichen Einverständnisses der Rechteinhaber. Haftungsausschluss Alle Angaben erfolgen ohne Gewähr für Vollständigkeit oder Richtigkeit. Es wird keine Haftung übernommen für Schäden durch die Verwendung von Informationen aus diesem Online-Angebot oder durch das Fehlen von Informationen. Dies gilt auch für Inhalte Dritter, die über dieses Angebot zugänglich sind. Ein Dienst der ETH-Bibliothek ETH Zürich, Rämistrasse 101, 8092 Zürich, Schweiz, www.library.ethz.ch http://www.e-periodica.ch Magic and the Great Trust: The Place of the Intellectual in Mark Twain's and Edward Bellamy's Visions of Distant Societies Otto Heim One of the most interesting aspects of the Gilded Age is the apparent discontinuity between the outward manifestations of power and the internal transformations within the structure of power itself.
    [Show full text]
  • American Periodicals: Politics (Opportunities for Research in the Watkinson Library)
    Trinity College Trinity College Digital Repository Watkinson Library (Rare books & Special Watkinson Publications Collections) 2016 American Periodicals: Politics (Opportunities for Research in the Watkinson Library) Leonard Banco Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.trincoll.edu/exhibitions Part of the Political History Commons Recommended Citation Banco, Leonard, "American Periodicals: Politics (Opportunities for Research in the Watkinson Library)" (2016). Watkinson Publications. 23. https://digitalrepository.trincoll.edu/exhibitions/23 Series Introduction A traditional focus ofcollecting in the Watkinson since we opened on August 28, 1866, has been American periodicals, and we have quite a good representation of them from the late 18th to the early 20th centuries. However, in terms of "discoverability" (to use the current term), it is not enough to represent each of the 600-plus titles in the online catalog. We hope that our students, faculty, and other researchers will appreciate this series of annotated guides to our periodicals, broken down into basic themes (politics, music, science and medicine, children, education, women, etc.), all of which have been compiled by Watkinson Trustee and volunteer Dr. Leonard Banco. We extend our deep thanks to Len for the hundreds of hours he has devoted to this project since the spring of 2014. His breadth of knowledge about the period and his inquisitive nature have made it possible for us to promote a unique resource through this work, which has POLITICS already been of great use to visiting scholars and Trinity classes. Students and faculty keen for projects will take note Introduction of the possibilities! The Watkinson holds 2819th-century American magazines with primarily political content, 11 of which are complete Richard J.
    [Show full text]
  • The Project Gutenberg Ebook of Things to Make, by Archibald Williams This Ebook Is for the Use of Anyone Anywhere at No Cost
    The Project Gutenberg EBook of Things To Make, by Archibald Williams This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net Title: Things To Make Author: Archibald Williams Release Date: January 11, 2005 [EBook #14664] Language: English Character set encoding: ASCII *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THINGS TO MAKE *** Produced by Don Kostuch Transcriber's Note: If the pdf version of the book is viewed using facing pages with even numbered pages on the left, you will see a close approximation of the original book. Notations of the form "(1,650) 2" appear at the bottom of some pages; they are probably printer's references for assembling to book. The text only version is of limited use because of the many figures used. I recommend the pdf or rtf versions. Some of the projects should be approached with care since they involve corrosive or explosive chemicals, electricity and steam boilers. Do not use lead solder, particularly on cooking utensils. Whether you simply want to travel back into the mind of a young boy at the beginning of the twentieth century, or want to try your hand at some interesting projects in carpentry, machinery, kites and many other areas, have fun. The following four pages have definitions of unusual (to me) terms used frequently in the text. Terms Batten - Narrow strip of wood.
    [Show full text]
  • Is It Free to Download Books on Ibooks Wilder
    Is It Free To Download Books On Ibooks Wilder 1 / 4 2 / 4 Is It Free To Download Books On Ibooks Wilder 3 / 4 144 books based on 144 votes: Prince of Wolves by Quinn Loftis, UnEnchanted by Chanda Hahn, Blood Money by Anthony Hulse, ... Free ebooks for your iBook account on your iPad or iPhone. ... Glamour (Rae Wilder, #1) by.. http :// bookscloud .top/ebook.php?asin=1442345667... Seguir leyendo ... Little House On The Prairie By Laura Ingalls Wilder free download pdf. Little House On .... Buy books and download them to read offline. ... Use the Books app on your iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch with the latest version of iOS ... or audiobooks in your country or region, but you can access free public domain books.. Here is our handpicked selection of the best free ebooks for the iPad, so you ... Wilde was a major proponent of the aestheticism movement, .... Apple Books, the successor to iBooks is about to launch, but if Apple wants to ... 5GB of room on it, so it was actively trying to free up space ... by deleting books. ... Amazon lets you download each Kindle collection with a single tap. ... Patrick Mahomes' Girlfriend Goes Wild After Super Bowl WinNYPost.com.. Editorial Reviews. Amazon.com Review. An Amazon Best Book of December 2019: Kiley ... Download it once and read it on your Kindle device, PC, phones or tablets. ... “Such a Fun Age is blessedly free of preaching, but if Reid has an ethos, ... issues with a touch of wit will find this a worthy alternative to a wild night out.
    [Show full text]
  • A Changing Landscape: the Role of Ebooks in Scholarly Communication
    Our Journal of Perpetual Sorrow (Student Edition) (2011) 1 A Changing Landscape: The Role of EBooks in Scholarly Communication S.Gunderson School of Library, Archival, and Information Studies, University of British Introduction What does it take to become a monograph? Webster dictionary defines monograph as “a learned treatise on a small area of learning” also “a written account of a single thing”.1 This speaks to the intangible nature of the monograph, but what about its physical form? As a tangible product, mentioning a monograph is likely to conjure up images of hundred‐plus page ‘books’ complete with ink, paper, binding, and page numbers. Print publishing of monographs has stood as a respectable and meaningful form of communication for centuries now, yet the viable future of the hard copy now faces a formidable counterpart: the electronic book (hereafter referred to as the eBook). In this paper, the changing landscape of academic book publishing and distribution will be explored, namely by analyzing the emerging role of the eBook. At the heart of this paper is a simple notion, that much like the transition from print to electronic journals that has taken place since the 1990s, a similar transition from print monograph to eBook is already underway in scholarly communications, and is being driven by a number of forces that will be presented throughout this discussion. Without question, writing a monograph for print publication can be a critical academic achievement for scholars, particularly those pursuing tenured positions.2 Our Journal of Perpetual Sorrow (Student Edition) (2011) 1 This is just one of the many challenges that eBooks still face.
    [Show full text]
  • Downloading Ebooks from Project Gutenberg to Your Computer, Kindle, Nook, Or Ipad
    Downloading eBooks from Project Gutenberg to Your Computer, Kindle, Nook, or iPad Downloading to Your Computer Downloading to Your iPad Downloading to Your Kindle Downloading to Your Nook Downloading to Your Computer Click the Download this ebook to your ereader, tablet PC, or computer link. This will take you to the download page for the current title. Select “EPUB” format. A window will pop up with – “Save file” – click “OK,” choose an appropriate place to save, and click “Save.” This ebook format must be viewed using Adobe Digital Editions. Click here to download. Enjoy! Downloading to Your iPad Click the Download this ebook to your ereader, tablet PC, or computer link. This will take you to the download page for the current title. Click on “EPUB” format. Click “Open in iBooks.” The ebook will automatically download and open in iBooks. Enjoy! Downloading to Your Kindle Using USB Cord Using Email Click the Download this ebook to your ereader, Click the Download this ebook to your ereader, tablet PC, or computer link. This will take you to the tablet PC, or computer link. This will take you to the download page for the current title. download page for the current title. Use the “Kindle” format. Attach the USB cord to your computer and Kindle. A window will pop up with – “Save file” – click “OK,” Use the “Kindle” format. choose an appropriate place to save, and click A window will pop up with – “Save file” – click “OK,” “Save.” This will save your selection to your choose an appropriate place to save, and click computer, and it can then be emailed to your “Save.” This will save your selection to your Kindle.
    [Show full text]
  • Histoire-Ebook.Pdf
    Table des matières Remerciements 1. Le Projet Gutenberg, un projet visionnaire 2. Les grandes dates du Projet Gutenberg 3. Le PDF, format pionnier lancé par Adobe 4. Gabriel, portail des bibliothèques nationales européennes 5. Gallica, bibliothèque numérique de la BnF 6. Du PDA au smartphone 7. Les premières liseuses 8. E Ink, une technologie d’encre électronique 9. Des dictionnaires et encyclopédies en ligne 10. Les aventures d’auteurs de best-sellers 11. L’EPUB devient le format standard 12. Wikipédia, une encyclopédie planétaire 13. La licence Creative Commons 14. De Google Print à Google Books 15. L’Internet Archive, une bibliothèque planétaire 16. L’ebook vu par quelques pionniers 17. Un hommage aux bibliothécaires 18. Une chronologie de 1971 à nos jours @@@@@@@ Remerciements Merci à Nicolas Gary, directeur de publication d’ActuaLitté, pour la diffusion de ce livre sous forme d’articles. Merci à Denis Renard pour ses beaux dessins. Merci à tous les professionnels du livre interviewés de par le monde pendant près de vingt ans pour mes articles et livres sur le sujet. Merci au Projet Gutenberg de nous offrir plus de 65.000 livres numériques gratuits de qualité dans 60 langues pour ses 50 ans. Merci aux volontaires de Distributed Proofreaders pour la révision de ces livres à deux reprises. Merci à l’Internet Archive pour ses Community Texts ouverts à tous. Merci à tous les bibliothécaires de gérer au mieux tant de documents. Merci à tous les traducteurs et traductrices professionnels, trop souvent oubliés. Marie Lebert [email protected] @@@@@@@ 1. Le Projet Gutenberg, un projet visionnaire Le Projet Gutenberg est fondé par Michael Hart en juillet 1971 pour créer des versions numériques d'œuvres littéraires du domaine public et les diffuser gratuitement dans le monde entier.
    [Show full text]
  • Open Dissertation 7-20.Pdf
    The Pennsylvania State University The Graduate School Department of English AT THE INTERSECTION OF UTOPIA AND THE PUBLIC SPHERE: THE SPATIAL-RHETORICAL NEGOTIATIONS OF 19TH-CENTURY WOMEN A Dissertation in English by Michelle C. Smith ! 2010 Michelle C. Smith Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy August 2010 The dissertation of Michelle C. Smith was reviewed and approved* by the following: Cheryl Glenn Liberal Arts Research Professor of English Dissertation Advisor Chair of Committee John L. Selzer Professor of English Hester Blum Associate Professor of English Melissa Wright Associate Professor of Geography Robert E. Burkholder Associate Professor of English Associate Head of the Department of English *Signatures are on file in the Graduate School iii ABSTRACT The primary goal of this dissertation is to understand the role of space in women’s participation in 19th-century intentional communities and publics. Through their participation in 19th-century utopian experiments, my subjects were exposed to unconventional ideas about space, gender, labor, and community. Like many other participants in such communities, my subjects also formed rhetorical alliances with larger American communities concerned with business, politics, and social norms. The project follows these rhetorical trajectories from utopian space to the public sphere, guided by my overarching question: how does space affect the rhetorical alliances of 19th-century women? Following the theoretical and methodological orientation in Chapter Two, I go on to examine three female rhetors, drawing from their published writings and speeches and archival sources within their communities or pertaining to the women themselves. Chapter Three explores the infamous Frances Wright.
    [Show full text]