Thursday, November 28, 2019
Utopia By More Essays - Utopian Novels, Utopia, Utopian Fiction
  Utopia By More    Focus Question: How does More comment on his times through Utopia? Syllabus  outcome: Describe the interrelationship between the religious environment and  the social and cultural context on which the literature draws. Introduction:    When I chose to review Utopia, I can honestly say that I had no idea of what I  was letting myself in for. The book is so complex and there are so many  conflicting ideas and interpretations that for a time I considered changing to  an easier topic. However, Utopia is a fascinating book and gives an insight in    European society just prior to the Reformation - obviously a time of major  upheaval. My initial focus question was : How does Thomas More demonstrate in  his book "Utopia" the hypocrisy of Christianity throughout the middle  ages and how does he comment on possible solutions. However this question was  much too broad and I felt that I was missing the whole point of the text and the  insight it gives. So I modified the question to "How does Thomas More  comment on his times through Utopia." Commentaries on Utopia were fairly  hard to come by as shown in my diary, though I did find some useful texts. The  movie "a man for all seasons" also gave an interesting insight into  the life of Thomas More. It must also be said that interviews with experts were  practically impossible as literary critics are few and far between and Utopia is  no longer a source of inspiration to many people. Overall Utopia was a  fascinating topic for research and I enjoyed learning more about it. All writers  are influenced by the times in which they live and Thomas More was no exception.    He wrote Utopia during a time of great upheaval and expectation throughout    Europe. Furthermore, The Christian church was experiencing a period of great  uncertainty and hypocrisy. Utopia was published in 1516; one year before Luther  posted his 95 theses at Witenberg and the reformation officially began.    Therefore, More wrote at a time when there was great poverty amongst the  oppressed serfs. The Church was becoming increasingly corrupt, greedy rulers  were waging wars throughout Europe to fulfill their own petty ambitions and the  renaissance was causing a cultural uprising. Resultantly Utopia was a product of  religious, social and cultural upheaval. As Erasmus once claimed in The Praise  of Folly (1511), "contemporary pontiffs instead of being the vicars of    Christ, had become the deadliest enemies of the Church, striving ceaselessly  after wealth, honours, and countless pleasures, even stooping to fight with fire  and sword to preserve their privileges. " When this work is juxtaposed with    Luther's 95 theses and especially More's Utopia it becomes apparent that these  key intellectuals were deeply dissatisfied with the church. Central to their  ideas was the concept that faith alone, grace alone and Scripture alone  justified a place in heaven without the purchasing of indulgences. The selling  of indulgences was a practice whereby money was paid to guarantee salvation. In  this way the Church amassed great wealth at the expense of the peasantry. Thus  religious greed compounded social difficulties and made poverty and crime an  acute problem which is considered by More in Utopia. In book 1, he considers  what is wrong with civilisation. Especially with regard to the severity of the  penal code and the unequal distribution of wealth. More, through his imaginary  character Hythloday claims that the death penalty for stealing is too harsh and  that he would much prefer to seek remedies that would eliminate the causes of  stealing. He further describes how, that in the social context of 16th Century    Europe men were forced to steal out of desperation and starvation. He argues  that "the system was fundamentally faulty...in which non-productive  noblemen maintained non-productive flunkeys while forcing the common labourers  to drudge in abject poverty. " Furthermore, More makes a comment on the  legal system of the times through discussing the Utopian legal system in which  the laws are such that the simplest meaning is always correct, such that there  are no need for lawyers and there are no loop holes in the law. Hence people can  defend themselves regardless of their intellectual capactity. More then comments  on the legal system of the time through the imaginary character Hythloday. He  claims " in fact, when I consider any social system that prevails in the  modern world, I can't, so help me God, see it as anything but a conspiracy of  the rich to advance their own interests under the pretext of organising society.  " More also makes mention of that "blessed    
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