Javascript must be enabled to continue!
The Obsolete Necessity
View through CrossRef
«The republication of Ken Roemer’s 1976 classic reaffirms how necessary, and non-obsolete, this book and expressions of utopia remain. Roemer’s engaging introduction reviews the career of a foundational scholar-teacher, and reassesses the life of a book, written during times of national unrest, that captured the aspirations of American modernity. This fine reissue is timely as, of necessity, u/dystopian speculation flourishes anew.»
(Jennifer A. Wagner-Lawlor, Professor of Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies, Penn State University, Editor, Utopian Studies)
«Ken Roemer’s Obsolete Necessity is simply foundational for scholars of utopias and utopianism. I’ve learned from it and assigned it countless times in courses from first-year writing to graduate seminars, and will continue to do so forever. There is no better, clearer introduction to America-as-utopia or to ways of thinking through national identity formation in utopian literature from its most fertile two decades at the end of the nineteenth century.»
(Peter Sands, Director UWM Honors College, University of Wisconsin / Milwaukee, Editor, H-UTOPIA)
The Obsolete Necessity expanded the canon of American utopias during their print-culture Golden Era from 40 to more than 160 works. What were the natures and impacts of these fictions? Were they accurate indices to the desires and fears of Americans? Roemer uses a combination of biographical research, innovative statistical content analyses, and cultural/historical contextualizations to address these questions. He demonstrates how the utopists’ concepts of time, space, and the potential to transform individuals shaped their visions of economies, religion, cities, and women, as well as daily life. Throughout, Roemer emphasizes tense combinations of old and new, and hopes and fears. The new Introduction defines how the utopias are relevant/irrelevant today, incorporates insights from Lyman Tower Sargents’s further expansion of the canon, articulates a theory of culture, and concludes with speculations about the creation of «influential» scholarship.
Peter Lang Verlag
Title: The Obsolete Necessity
Description:
«The republication of Ken Roemer’s 1976 classic reaffirms how necessary, and non-obsolete, this book and expressions of utopia remain.
Roemer’s engaging introduction reviews the career of a foundational scholar-teacher, and reassesses the life of a book, written during times of national unrest, that captured the aspirations of American modernity.
This fine reissue is timely as, of necessity, u/dystopian speculation flourishes anew.
»
(Jennifer A.
Wagner-Lawlor, Professor of Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies, Penn State University, Editor, Utopian Studies)
«Ken Roemer’s Obsolete Necessity is simply foundational for scholars of utopias and utopianism.
I’ve learned from it and assigned it countless times in courses from first-year writing to graduate seminars, and will continue to do so forever.
There is no better, clearer introduction to America-as-utopia or to ways of thinking through national identity formation in utopian literature from its most fertile two decades at the end of the nineteenth century.
»
(Peter Sands, Director UWM Honors College, University of Wisconsin / Milwaukee, Editor, H-UTOPIA)
The Obsolete Necessity expanded the canon of American utopias during their print-culture Golden Era from 40 to more than 160 works.
What were the natures and impacts of these fictions? Were they accurate indices to the desires and fears of Americans? Roemer uses a combination of biographical research, innovative statistical content analyses, and cultural/historical contextualizations to address these questions.
He demonstrates how the utopists’ concepts of time, space, and the potential to transform individuals shaped their visions of economies, religion, cities, and women, as well as daily life.
Throughout, Roemer emphasizes tense combinations of old and new, and hopes and fears.
The new Introduction defines how the utopias are relevant/irrelevant today, incorporates insights from Lyman Tower Sargents’s further expansion of the canon, articulates a theory of culture, and concludes with speculations about the creation of «influential» scholarship.
Related Results
Apokatastasisand apostolicity: a response to Oliver Crisp on the question of Barth's universalism
Apokatastasisand apostolicity: a response to Oliver Crisp on the question of Barth's universalism
AbstractOliver Crisp argues that Karl Barth is incoherent on the question of universal salvation. Making use of a modal distinction between contingent and necessary universalism, C...
Academia 1.0: Slow Food in a Fast Food Culture? (A Reply to John Hartley)
Academia 1.0: Slow Food in a Fast Food Culture? (A Reply to John Hartley)
"You could think of our kind of scholarship," he said, "as something like 'slow food' in a fast-food culture."— Ivan Kreilkamp, co-editor of Victorian Studies(Chronicle of Higher E...
Is War Becoming Obsolete? A Sociological Analysis
Is War Becoming Obsolete? A Sociological Analysis
There is a degree of consensus among scholars that the character of warfare has substantially changed over the past three decades. However, there is no agreement about the directio...
Topographies of the obsolete
Topographies of the obsolete
Topographies of the Obsolete is an artistic research project conceived in 2012 by
University of Bergen Professors Neil Brownsword and Anne Helen Mydland,
in collaboration with six...
Questionable necessity effects of basic psychological needs at work: A comment on Ding and Kuvaas (2025)
Questionable necessity effects of basic psychological needs at work: A comment on Ding and Kuvaas (2025)
In necessary condition analysis (NCA), a (semi-) empty space in the upper-left corner in a XY-plot is taken to indicate that a low value on X precludes a high value on Y, i.e., tha...
Making a Difference: Liability and Necessity
Making a Difference: Liability and Necessity
Abstract
Building on Stapleton’s analysis, this chapter aims to improve understanding of the role of necessity—of making a difference to the occurrence of an outcome...
International journal of philosophical studies (Print)
International journal of philosophical studies (Print)
According to Donald Davidson, linguistic meaning is determined by the principle of charity. Because of Davidson's semantic behaviourism, charity's significance is both epistemic an...
Transcendental Arguments
Transcendental Arguments
As generally understood, transcendental arguments are deductive arguments that aim to establish a certain claim A by arguing that A is a necessary condition for another claim B. Cu...

