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The Forms of Utopia

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A new analysis of utopia as a literary form, with recursive patterns that draw from early modern logic and mathematicsIn this ingenious and provocative book, Jenny Mann asks us to shift our underst...
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  • 27 October 2026
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A new analysis of utopia as a literary form, with recursive patterns that draw from early modern logic and mathematics

In this ingenious and provocative book, Jenny Mann asks us to shift our understanding of utopia from its politics to its form. Beginning with Thomas More’s Utopia (1516), one of the most influential books of all time, Mann shows that utopia’s recursive patterns—its frames, folds, knots, meanders, and turns—enable the perpetual invention of limitless artificial worlds.

Mann demonstrates how paradox, labyrinth, and recursion, in the hands of More, William Shakespeare, and Margaret Cavendish, become techniques of utopian invention. Drawing on concepts from logic and mathematics, including the Liar’s Paradox and the conundrum of squaring the circle, to make sense of utopia’s impossible geometries, she offers fresh and illuminating considerations of More’s Utopia, Shakespeare’s The Tempest, and Cavendish’s Blazing World, each representing a different form of utopia. These sections are framed by interludes that feature an artwork or artifact—an intarsia-paneled door, a turf maze, a silver coin—that materially expresses an element of utopia’s puzzling structure. To study utopia, she argues, we must enter its structure and follow the disorienting paths. Utopia works by transforming enclosed spaces—a book, a play—into sites of infinite possibility.

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Price: $35.00
Pages: 248
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Imprint: Princeton University Press
Publication Date: 27 October 2026
ISBN: 9780691283678
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

LITERARY CRITICISM / Renaissance, Literary studies: c 1400 to c 1600, LITERARY CRITICISM / Subjects & Themes / Politics, LITERARY CRITICISM / Semiotics & Theory, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Utopias, PHILOSOPHY / Social, Literature: history and criticism, Literary theory, Dystopian and utopian fiction, Social and political philosophy

Jenny C. Mann is professor of English at New York University. She is the author of The Trials of Orpheus: Poetry, Science, and the Early Modern Sublime and Outlaw Rhetoric: Figuring Vernacular Eloquence in Shakespeare’s England.