The Peripheral NarratorThe narrator of the novel Utopia (Moore) is, in fact, its author. Ever since the real New World's discovery by explorers, Christopher Columbus and many others like him started penning first-person narratives of the new landscapes they stumbled upon. Thomas More was simply emulating such narratives to give an authentic feel to his work. Readers feel they're reading a real, authentic tale:
"It would take too long to repeat all that Raphael told us he had observed in various places; nor would it altogether serve our present purpose. Perhaps on another occasion we shall tell more about the things that are most profitable" (Moore, 1516, p. 13)
In the aforementioned paragraph, the author (as narrator) attempts to give an impression of really being present when the events transpired and of being bound by memory- and time- related limitations. Such narration in the first-person lures and captivates readers, as well as urges them to adopt a critical perspective of current overall societal and global injustices.
The Sarcastic Approach
Utopian genre tales are all designed for the same purpose: to offer a positive fantasy setting wherein characters can freely express themselves, voice their views and establish their individual identity, whilst envisaging and toiling to achieve a better social order. Five centuries ago, Thomas More, then the English King Henry the Eighth's Lord Chancellor, had the opportunity to travel to Flanders as part of a contingent of diplomats to re-discuss the Britain-Flanders trade relationship. It was in the course of these protracted negotiations that he penned much of Utopia, a literary piece brimming with clever word plays and subtle censure. The rationale for the latter was a fear of punishment and of having his work condemned and unpublished if he included obvious differences of opinion in the novel. Therefore, although the author utilizes this book as a platform from which to communicate his personal views, he does so via a complex framework (using a fictitious first-person narrator) that ensures he isn't held liable for whatever views are articulated in the novel.
The main character in the tale, from its outset, is "Hythloday" (Greek for "a person who dispenses with nonsense.") This narrator who already seems an untrustworthy source commences his tale with a criticism of the...
Thomas More's Utopia as a Criticism of 16th Century England There are several notions put in utopia by Thomas More. There is the religious aspect, power sharing and the evils of the private property contrasts in the contemporary England in the 16th century. The Utopian creation by More is a satirical mirroring of the society as well as his own life. His audiences attracted despite their opposition of the idea of
Politics Thomas More wrote Utopia in 1515 and in the story this place of "utopia" is told to him by a friend who encounters it upon his travels. Utopia is described by Giles, More's friend, as a place where there isn't any social unrest and suffering is nowhere to be found. More seems to have written Utopia with the idea of individual freedom in mind; however, there are some problems with
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