Skip navigation

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12128/13391
Title: Wyspa strachów Fuhrera : utopia jako śmiertelne zagrożenie, które nigdy nie przychodzi
Authors: Nowak, Maciej
Keywords: utopian imagination; psychological fantasy; political fantasy; Adolf Hitler’s vision of (post-Nazi) Germany
Issue Date: 2014
Citation: Er(r)go, Nr 29, z. 2 (2014) s. 43-64
Abstract: The essay looks at what it calls an utopian imagination, as a universal, psychological as well as political, fantasy, which has always helped man and mankind to keep their mind away from fear and anxiety. The author assumes that anxiety, and the fear of Others “we know not of” (to play upon a Shakespearean note) are inherent to human nature, if only for reasons known to all readers of Freud. One of the ways in which “civilisation” helps individual subjects to deal with fear is that it keeps on updating utopian schemes “on offer,” which usually comes as a visionary text authored by a charismatic dreamer, a prominent writer of his age, or a Führer (a term read Freud-wise) of a group, a collective body, a whole nation. There are fairly “safe” utopian, or near-utopian narratives, whose character is clearly fictitious; for example the classic utopias (of Plato, Thomas More, Francis Bacon, Shakespeare.) But there are truly perilous visions of “no-places” which in their time made a tremendous impact on minds of multitudes, and seem to have very seriously messed with “real” history. Among the notorious utopias we find Adolf Hitler’s vision of (post-Nazi) Germany of course, but also ones proper to the, quite authorless, ideological appeals of the 21st century.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12128/13391
ISSN: 1508-6305
2544-3186
Appears in Collections:Artykuły (W.Hum.)

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
Nowak_Wyspa_strachow_Fuhrera.pdf634,12 kBAdobe PDFView/Open
Show full item record


Uznanie autorstwa na tych samych warunkach 3.0 Polska Creative Commons License Creative Commons