
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Novelist Ilija Trojanow discusses why we need to embrace the idea of utopia in order to imagine a better future.
"It's important to not confuse what does exist with what is impossible, which is how most people use the word "utopian" in everyday parlance," Trojanow says. "Progress has, at times, been utopia come true. By envisaging differing realities, we are imagining alternatives into existence.
"Truly utopian narratives challenge existing preconceptions by opening windows of thought and fantasy that give life to a multitude of possibilities," Trojanow continues. "In order to survive, we will have to redefine our modes of planetary existence, and this will be impossible without powerful utopian imagination. Thus, utopia is not the art of the impossible, it is the rational of the necessary."
Tojanow, author of more than 60 fiction and nonfiction books, delivered the 2022 Mosse Lecture at UC Berkeley on Sept. 1. The annual lecture was organized by Berkeley's Department of German and the Institute of European Studies, in collaboration with the Mosse Foundation and the German Historical Institute's Pacific Office at Berkeley.
Read a transcript and listen to the episode on Berkeley News.
Music by Blue Dot Sessions.
Photo courtesy of Ilija Trojanow.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4.8
2525 ratings
Novelist Ilija Trojanow discusses why we need to embrace the idea of utopia in order to imagine a better future.
"It's important to not confuse what does exist with what is impossible, which is how most people use the word "utopian" in everyday parlance," Trojanow says. "Progress has, at times, been utopia come true. By envisaging differing realities, we are imagining alternatives into existence.
"Truly utopian narratives challenge existing preconceptions by opening windows of thought and fantasy that give life to a multitude of possibilities," Trojanow continues. "In order to survive, we will have to redefine our modes of planetary existence, and this will be impossible without powerful utopian imagination. Thus, utopia is not the art of the impossible, it is the rational of the necessary."
Tojanow, author of more than 60 fiction and nonfiction books, delivered the 2022 Mosse Lecture at UC Berkeley on Sept. 1. The annual lecture was organized by Berkeley's Department of German and the Institute of European Studies, in collaboration with the Mosse Foundation and the German Historical Institute's Pacific Office at Berkeley.
Read a transcript and listen to the episode on Berkeley News.
Music by Blue Dot Sessions.
Photo courtesy of Ilija Trojanow.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
3,899 Listeners
37,951 Listeners
358 Listeners
3,480 Listeners
43,871 Listeners
6,698 Listeners
1,047 Listeners
86,809 Listeners
32,380 Listeners
20 Listeners
16,133 Listeners
304 Listeners
15,532 Listeners
1,503 Listeners
741 Listeners
1,357 Listeners