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Canonbury Masonic Research Centre 2007 Conference Print E-mail
Monday, 19 March 2007

19.03.2007

Visions of Utopia
Masonic, Religious & Esoteric

Call for Papers

The Ninth International Conference organised by CMRC
Saturday & Sunday 3-4 November 2007
Canonbury Academy, 6 Canonbury Place, London N1 2NQ

Papers are invited from scholars of all disciplines, whether Freemasons or not. Papers should contain original, hitherto unpublished research, and be fully documented and illustrated. They need not be narrowly focused and may be wide-ranging as to the content, chronology, and treatment of the theme.

The idea that a perfect society could be planned, created and sustained can be traced back to Plato?s description of Atlantis, but it entered the popular imagination during the religious and cultural upheavals of Renaissance and Reformation when, in the early sixteenth century, Sir Thomas More published Utopia, his speculative vision of an ideal society. Since that time speculative philosophers, enthusiasts, dreamers, visionaries and reformers ? of every shade of religious, political and philosophical opinion ? have presented countless other visions of the ideal society to the world at large, ranging from Sir Francis Bacon?s New Atlantis to Aldous Huxley?s Brave New World. These have varied from messianic and impracticable dreams, sometimes satirical or even dystopian in tone, to a number of real projects that have, for a time, succeeded and flourished. Many Enlightenment projects could perhaps be viewed as utopian in character.

These visions frequently represented an optimistic view of human society, offering innovative ideas and espousing such values as religious and political tolerance, mutual aid and openness to philosophical and spiritual speculation. Their value to us lies not only in their historical interest and in the intriguing nature of individual utopian visionaries, but also in the significance of their ideas for the improvement of a world in a state of uncertainty and flux. 

This conference aims to consider the many aspects - historical, biographical, literary, artistic and speculative - of these visions of Utopia, to explore their sources and the variety of interactions between them, including the contribution of Freemasonry as a speculative system to the articulation of utopian visions and the involvement of individual freemasons in utopian projects. Topics for papers may include, for example, real or imaginary societies; established utopian settlements; literary utopias; socio-religious innovators; biographical and critical studies of personalities who have exercised a significant influence or contributed to utopian visions within or upon the masonic community; and the question of hierarchical versus non-hierarchical systems in relation to masonic views of the ideal society.

More info:

Canonbury Masonic Research Centre
http://www.canonbury.ac.uk/conferences/2007.htm

 

 

 
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