Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Practical Utopia
View through CrossRef
Dartington Hall was a social experiment of kaleidoscopic vitality, set up in Devon in 1925 by a fabulously wealthy American heiress, Dorothy Elmhirst (née Whitney), and her Yorkshire-born husband, Leonard. It quickly achieved international fame with its progressive school, craft production and wide-ranging artistic endeavours. Dartington was a residential community of students, teachers, farmers, artists and craftsmen committed to revivifying life in the countryside. It was also a socio-cultural laboratory, where many of the most brilliant interwar minds came to test out their ideas about art, society, spirituality and rural regeneration. To this day, Dartington Hall remains a symbol of countercultural experimentation and a centre for arts, ecology and social justice. Practical Utopia presents a compelling portrait of a group of people trying to live out their ideals, set within an international framework, and demonstrates Dartington's tangled affinities with other unity-seeking projects across Britain and in India and America.
Title: Practical Utopia
Description:
Dartington Hall was a social experiment of kaleidoscopic vitality, set up in Devon in 1925 by a fabulously wealthy American heiress, Dorothy Elmhirst (née Whitney), and her Yorkshire-born husband, Leonard.
It quickly achieved international fame with its progressive school, craft production and wide-ranging artistic endeavours.
Dartington was a residential community of students, teachers, farmers, artists and craftsmen committed to revivifying life in the countryside.
It was also a socio-cultural laboratory, where many of the most brilliant interwar minds came to test out their ideas about art, society, spirituality and rural regeneration.
To this day, Dartington Hall remains a symbol of countercultural experimentation and a centre for arts, ecology and social justice.
Practical Utopia presents a compelling portrait of a group of people trying to live out their ideals, set within an international framework, and demonstrates Dartington's tangled affinities with other unity-seeking projects across Britain and in India and America.
Related Results
Mapping Utopia
Mapping Utopia
Abstract
In More’s Utopia the influence of theoretical geography of the early sixteenth century met New World exploration narrative, with the result that the excitem...
Modern Utopia: Yuval Noah Harari
Modern Utopia: Yuval Noah Harari
The article is devoted to the analysis of the current state of utopia, in particular, attention is paid to the problem of the crisis of utopian thought that arose at the end of the...
From Ephemeral Planning to Permanent Urbanism: An Urban Planning Theory of Mega-Events
From Ephemeral Planning to Permanent Urbanism: An Urban Planning Theory of Mega-Events
Mega-events like the Olympic Games are powerful forces that shape cities. In the wake of mega-events, a variety of positive and negative legacies have remained in host cities. In o...
Belief in the Age of Disbelief: Form, Utopia and Assemblage
Belief in the Age of Disbelief: Form, Utopia and Assemblage
This paper attempts to unfold the intricate relationship between architecture, the discourse around utopia, and the form of utopia itself with a specific focus on recent phenomena...
The Persistence of Utopia: Plasticity and Difference from Roland Barthes to Catherine Malabou
The Persistence of Utopia: Plasticity and Difference from Roland Barthes to Catherine Malabou
The theorizing of utopia is a persistent theme throughout several generations of the French continental tradition, and alongside the process theory of Alfred North Whitehead to a l...
Sociology and Utopia
Sociology and Utopia
The theme of this paper is that the content, form, location and social role of utopia vary with the material conditions in which people live. These variations have ...
The Protestant Tempering of Utopia
The Protestant Tempering of Utopia
This chapter examines the notion of “Utopia.” It is widely known that Utopia means “no place.” However, few know that it is pronounced just the same as
eutopoei...
Utopia Unbound
Utopia Unbound
Abstract
This chapter traces the publication of the early Latin editions of Utopia—Louvain (1516), Paris (1517), Basel (1518 twice), and Florence (1519)—exploring th...

