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Upside-down Utopia

Directionality for the City of God

Jay Burkette J. Goosby Smith

$170

Hardback

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English
Lexington Books/Fortress Academic
15 March 2025
Recent scholarship on process-driven utopia exhibits two startling omissions. The first is a lack of practical methodology proposed. The second elision is more serious. Without a way to discriminate between utopian hope and ideological agendas, the target for utopia’s pursuit becomes equally suspect. In this groundbreaking, interdisciplinary investigation of processual theory and methodology, Jay Burkette argues that while situating utopia within prefigurative performance remains the best option, certain facets must be refined to ensure it remains the ‘good place.’ These include a necessary moral grounding for its directionality as well as recognizing that different performative vectors are required from different actors. Blending the thought of Ernst Bloch, St. Augustine, Ruth Levitas, Walter Benjamin, Cristina Sharpe, Kierkegaard, and others, Upside-Down Utopia: Directionality for the City of God demonstrates that determining an appropriate heading for utopian affect entails identifying its genesis within past loss, an initial catastrophe defining humankind’s nature and struggle, highlighting the need for divine aid to orient the quest for the city of God.
By:  
Foreword by:  
Imprint:   Lexington Books/Fortress Academic
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm, 
Weight:   531g
ISBN:   9781666949049
ISBN 10:   1666949043
Pages:   274
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Acknowledgments Foreword Introduction Part I: Utopian Performativity vs. Merely-Political Comb Chapter One: Utopia Revisited: Performative Process vs. Fixed Destination Chapter Two: A Tale of Two Hopes, Part One Chapter Three: A Tale of Two Hopes, Part Two Part II: Epistemological Structures for Ordering Utopia’s Method Chapter Four: Faith as Utopia’s Framework Chapter Five: The Master’s Tools: What Cannot be Utopia’s Method Chapter Six: The Ethical Minefield, a Relational Challenge Part III: Ontological Frameworks and Practical Correctives Informing Utopia’s Method Chapter Seven: Alternate Futures: Privileged Utopian Correctives Chapter Eight: Rediscovering an Ancient-Modern Utopian Language Chapter Nine: A More Excellent Way: Invaded by Love Conclusion: Mutual Vulnerability: A Disaster-Focused Theory Appendix: Protopian Theory Bibliography About the Author

Jay Burkette teaches philosophy, political theory, security theory, history, and leadership at Virginia Tech University, Southern New Hampshire University, and Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University.

Reviews for Upside-down Utopia: Directionality for the City of God

In this unusual book, Jay Burkette provokes readers with new ways of thinking and practicing utopia. Analyzing texts from the ancients to the moderns to the postmoderns, from German Jewish thought to African American thought, and with surprising turns including to Eminem and Camelot, Burkette builds a constructive account of utopia that synthesizes critical theory and theology. While it is unlikely that readers will agree with all of Burkette’s arguments, thinking through those disagreements will surely be edifying. -- Vincent Lloyd, Villanova University I have long considered Jay Burkette an insightful thinker and wonderful conversationalist. In this provocative and indispensable work, Burkette takes bold steps—navigating the jagged terrain of weaponized vocabularies and polarized social relations—in pursuit of the utopian novum. This opportunity to engage with his formidable intellect, in long-form writing, should be cherished by anyone committed to unmaking codified social hierarchies, realizing divine human dignity, and unceasingly striving towards a better world. -- Anthony Kwame Harrison, Alumni Distinguished Professor, Virginia Tech In Upside-Down Utopia, Jay Burkette offers a practical guide on how to make progress toward a utopian ideal. Utopia, Burkette suggests, is a verb. Utopia is not a final state that society reaches; instead, it is a process. Burkette uses his expertise in social science and philosophy, and the religious view of the City of God, to show us how we can make a utopian ideal a reality. This book is essential reading for anyone interested in the connection between sociology, moral theory, and religion. -- Nathan Rockwood, Brigham Young University


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