
Check the post below for the homework (from More's
Utopia and Woody Allen's
Sleeper, 90min, available on YouTube). Now on to the questions!
Q1 (Demi): In Raphael's description, King Utopus said that he "suspected that God perhaps likes diverse and manifold forms of worship and therefore deliberately inspired different people with different views" (
Utopia, 580). What are some of the beliefs of the Utopians? How does King Utopus's statement jive with the depiction of More in
A Man for All Seasons that we watched in class this week?
Q2 (Annie): At the end of
Utopia, the character of "More" says this: "when Raphael had finished his story, I was left thinking that not a few customs and laws he had described as existing among the Utopians were quite absurd. Their methods of waging war, their religious practices, and their social customs were some of these, but my chief objection was to the basis of their whole system, that is, their communal living and their money economy" (588). Why does he say this? How closely should we take the character of "More" to resemble the actual views of More, the author?
Q3 (Jason): What is the Utopians' take on the relationship between pleasure and an ethical life? And how does it compare with the ways in which pleasure is depicted in
Sleeper?
Q4 (Jill): More inarguably designed his island of Utopia in response to social / political / moral problems he saw in early 16th-century England. Based on what you saw in
A Man for All Seasons, what are the principle problems he tries to address in
Utopia?
Q5 (Kate): Golden chamberpots?! In Utopia? Why?!
Q6 (Rachel): Why is slavery so essential in Utopia?
Q7 (Tina): What exactly is More's argument about the fictionality of Utopia in his final letter to Peter Giles, pp. 589-90?
Q8 (Vicky): If More's Utopia was designed in response to the problems and preoccupations More saw in early 16th-century England, then we can fairly safely say that Woody Allen's
Dys-topia in
Sleeper was written in response to certain 1973 American problems and preoccupations. Based on what you've seen in that movie, what were Americans worried about and obsessed with at that time?