by Samuel Butler (Author)
Erewhon is one of the great satirical fantasies of the nineteenth century, a fictional voyage into a society where ordinary assumptions have been turned inside out. Samuel Butler sends his narrator over the mountains into the strange country of Erewhon-"nowhere" rearranged-where illness is treated as a crime, crime is treated as an ailment, machines have been suppressed as dangerous rivals to humanity, and social respectability rests on customs that are at once absurd, logical, and disturbingly familiar. First published in 1872, the novel remains a sharp satire of Victorian morality, religion, education, law, technology, and social conformity.
Butler's power lies in making Erewhon comic, plausible, and unsettling at the same time. Its imaginary civilization is not simple utopia or straightforward dystopia, but a mirror held at an angle, exposing the contradictions of the world Butler knew and anticipating later speculative fiction built around invented societies and philosophical critique. The famous "Book of the Machines" section gives the novel particular modern force, raising early questions about machine evolution and artificial intelligence long before those became common literary subjects
Number of Pages: 184
Dimensions: 0.56 x 9 x 6 IN
Publication Date: April 03, 2018