Everyone becomes a servant of, and a paranoid observer of the non-negotiable commands of the Unnamed God of the Post-It notes. And what is the God of the Post-It notes, but a frustrated universal planner, a Utopian convinced that if only everyone else would follow their plan down to the last Post-It note and Post-It note instructions would be on every object then the community would finally be at peace.
There is one other final and hard-to-face factor that is an unintended consequences of Utopian alternative parenting experiments. There is a reason that the average life of a Utopian project is the time to takes to settle and begin to raise children. But the children of Utopians fail every test: they are selfish, they grab and steal, they fight, and love competitive sports, they bully and they lie — just like all other children.
Lying, it turns out, is a necessary developmental stage in learning. These naturally dishonest, violent creatures disprove the theory of human mind as a blank slate upon which images of perfection can be drawn.
As the behaviorist J. Utopian behavioral engineering is an ongoing struggle against something that Utopians deny even exists — human nature. Not only are Utopian parents horrified by the little dictators that they have spawned, they find that they themselves have horrible anti-Utopian cravings to put their children above all the others.
The maternal bond and the need for privacy also seem to be pan-cultural. Children brought up communally suffer neglect, as other adults find ways of refusing to care for children that are not their own. People care a lot more for their own kids than they do for other kids as an obligation. They also lead to male dominated harems. All of this is done, with the coercive Utopian alibi that all capitalist and patriarchal behaviors and boundaries must be swept away.
Auroville, which attempts to be government-free, and money-free, has been plagued with growing reports of the crimes of Sexual harassment, sexual assault, rape and murder. No matter how much Utopian communities try to get rid of the idea of sexual ownership — the female desire to chose a mate may be a constant for our species. It does however ensure the continuation of competitive behaviors, which leads us once again to hierarchies.
To get rid of this, female choice would have to be stopped, a process that we associate with cultures that are oppressive. The Shakers who were celibate and only adopted children became extinct after their adopted children refused to adopt the rules of Shakerism. The Harmony Society died out because it refused to reproduce. And the experiment in Fourierirsm known as Brook Farm ended after with many child related problems , one of which being when the children refused to be placed at the bottom of the Fourierist redistribution hierarchy and were forced to clean the toilets.
So many intentional communities create trouble for themselves by trying to replace the nuclear and extended family structure with other forms of mating and child rearing, only to find that mothers and children simply want to leave. One of the great mistakes we make in interpersonal behavior, is to judge people by their intentions and not by the real outcome of those intentions.
It could be that the greatest failing of intentional communities is contained within this very formulation. A community that is based upon declaring intentions is apt to be fearful of outcomes that would disprove those good intentions and invalidate them.
So, the burying of facts about failure moral, practical, political would appear to be one of the secret tasks of those who live by intentions alone, who, rather than trying to address problems as they arise would rather bury the results, hide the outcomes and continue as if good intentions were all that was required.
It is precisely this denial of outcomes that leads intentional communities to repeat the same mistakes over and over again. Ewan Morrison is a novelist, essayist and screenwriter. His new novel is the thriller How To Survive Everything. You know, if you change a few nouns and a couple of verbs, this author would be describing any major city or university campus. As someone raised in a Christian Fundamentalist, I deeply appreciate the insight this article lends to the topic of Utopias and closed communities.
Claims of suppressing individuality and free expression have been deliberately created wholesale and weaponized to silence the voices of marginalized individuals who seek to address the effect mass media has on public discourse and how that in turn affects their treatment at the hands of the state.
That one request has been mischaracterized by American pundits and professional political commentaries for decades because it comes off as an inherent criticism of their own behavior and they are defensive.
It serves their purposes well to stoke outrage and conflate the issue. This article will not be complete until the author also explains the anomalous success of the hundreds of Hutterite communes which they call colonies, like an ant or bee colony. What are they doing differently? I just looked them up online. They bear a relationship to Amish and Mennonite communities here in the United States having been initially formed at about the same time and due to the Protestant reformation.
There seem to be some specific differences in the Hutterite communities and the intentional communities mentioned in this essay which was awesome and informative by the way.
First, the family unit remains intact. There seems to be no attempt or intention to break the family unit, no communal sex, etc. They are allowed personal property. Anyone who rents is in a similar situation. There may be more differences but these were the big ones that stood out to me during my 10 minutes of research. Ironically this comes from their organizational website which looks professionally done.
This well-written article is a gem, a keeper. This article is painstakingly written in such a way as to explain why the many reasons utopian communities, initially created in the best of good intentions, become concentrated hell hole environments—worse environments than what was initially deplored, escaped.
Excellent and timely article. I wonder why utopian ideas persist despite a long and often bloody history of failure? I would suggest that a Hobbesian view of human nature makes an effective inoculation. Generally ideas persist due to the demand. You could examine the sociological aspects of psychology. For instance, what push factors lead individuals to reject their originating societies in the first place.
This would require a careful ear on your part to understand to why they want to setup a new society in the first place. There could be something wrong with the individual, whom you imply is the one that requires inoculation, or it could very well be that by their very existence that they are a symptom of larger systemic issues. Hi Ewan, Thanks for sharing your thoughts, literary research and limited experience in the matters above.
Are these the same in your mind? That is, monastic society exists and persists because sin is in man I desperately need italics. It is another topic, but it is perplexing to me how the world and everything in it can be understood coherently without the axiom of an imperfect and rebellious mankind.
The particular failings of these communes are, to me, case-in-point. I thought for a long time. In the future, the society of utopia is a society of intolerance to dissent, the society of utopia comes either to eugenics or to natural negative selection.
I think the society the utopia, this is the decline of civilization. For an unknown reason, civilization is going to this decline. A fascinating essay.
You briefly mention the Hutterites, who have been quite successful here in Western Canada. What give them the ability to thrive when so many other intentional communities fail?
It is true there are gender roles, a very few. Utopias are idealized visions of a perfect society. Utopianisms are those ideas put into practice. This is where the trouble begins. Thomas More coined the neologism utopia for his work that launched the modern genre for a good reason. Thus, the dark mirror of utopias are dystopias— failed social experiments, repressive political regimes, and overbearing economic systems that result from utopian dreams put into practice.
There is no best way to live because there is so much variation in how people want to live. Therefore, there is no best society, only multiple variations on a handful of themes as dictated by our nature.
For example, utopias are especially vulnerable when a social theory based on collective ownership, communal work, authoritarian rule, and a command-and-control economy collides with our natural-born desire for autonomy, individual freedom, and choice. Moreover, the natural differences in ability, interests, and preferences within any group of people leads to inequalities of outcomes and imperfect living and working conditions that utopias committed to equality of outcome cannot tolerate.
We had tried every conceivable form of organisation and government. We had a world in miniature. We had enacted the French revolution over again with despairing hearts instead of corpses as a result. Most of these 19th-century utopian experiments were relatively harmless because, without large numbers of members, they lacked political and economic power. While the Shakers, Owenites, and Fourierists all had intellectual roots in Europe, the most remarkable and, by many measures, the most successful utopian venture in American history was entirely homegrown.
For example, utopias are especially vulnerable when a social theory based on collective ownership, communal work, authoritarian rule, and a command-and-control economy collides with our natural-born desire for autonomy, individual freedom, and choice. If we analyze the fictions that have been grouped as utopian we can distinguish four types: a the paradise, in which a happier life is described as simply existing elsewhere; b the externally altered world, in which a new kind of life has been made possible by an unlooked for natural event; c the willed ….
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