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* OutgrownSuchSillySuperstitions: {{Averted}}. In contrast to most socialist ideologies (Marxism most particularly), Bellamy's socialism was explicitly Christian based on his interpretation of the Bible, which his fictional society reflects. Bellamy and his brother were actually both Baptist ministers.
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* OutgrownSuchSillySuperstitions: {{Averted}}. In contrast to most socialist ideologies (Marxism most particularly), Bellamy's socialism was explicitly Christian based on his interpretation of the Bible, which his fictional society reflects. Bellamy and his brother were actually both Baptist ministers. His book reflects this, since though it isn't focused on, his imagined USA in 2000 has such an ideology. At one point, the protagonist hears a sermon to this effect by a Christian minister.
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Redundant.
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* FailedFutureForecast:
** The book correctly predicts the invention of radio, credit cards and skyscrapers but strikes out for the social changes, predicting the US and most of the West would become socialist states.
** The book, published in 1888, predicted that by 2000 the US, Europe, and much of the world overall would be socialist. Not only did this not happen, but most socialist states collapsed in the late 80s/early 90s. However, it did accurately predict skyscrapers, credit cards and radio (the last being around the corner at the time).
** The book correctly predicts the invention of radio, credit cards and skyscrapers but strikes out for the social changes, predicting the US and most of the West would become socialist states.
** The book, published in 1888, predicted that by 2000 the US, Europe, and much of the world overall would be socialist. Not only did this not happen, but most socialist states collapsed in the late 80s/early 90s. However, it did accurately predict skyscrapers, credit cards and radio (the last being around the corner at the time).
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* FailedFutureForecast:
** The book correctly predicts the invention of radio, credit cards and skyscrapers but strikes out for the social changes, predicting the US and most of the West would become socialist states.
**FailedFutureForecast: The book, published in 1888, predicted that by 2000 the US, Europe, and much of the world overall would be socialist. Not only did this not happen, but most socialist states collapsed in the late 80s/early 90s. However, it did accurately predict skyscrapers, credit cards and radio (the last being around the corner at the time).
** The book correctly predicts the invention of radio, credit cards and skyscrapers but strikes out for the social changes, predicting the US and most of the West would become socialist states.
**
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* BombThrowingAnarchist: {{Discussed}} by Dr. Leete and Julian, the latter saying the anarchists in the late 1800s were actually subsidized by the capitalists to scare people off socialism from its association with terrorist violence. This was a big issue at the time the book was written in 1888. A year prior to this, for instance, four anarchists were hanged for conspiracy to murder police with a bomb in Chicago, though it's doubtful which (if any) actually did it (four others had also been convicted-one killed himself, the rest were pardoned).
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* BombThrowingAnarchist: {{Discussed}} by Julian and Dr. Leete and Julian, Leete, with the latter saying the anarchists in the late 1800s these types were actually [[FalseFlagOperation subsidized by the capitalists capitalists]] to scare people off socialism from its association with terrorist violence. This (This was a big issue at in the time late 1800s; the book was written published just two years after the infamous [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haymarket_affair Haymarket affair]] in 1888. A year prior to this, for instance, four which eight anarchists were hanged tried for conspiracy to murder police with a bomb in Chicago, though it's doubtful which (if any) actually did it (four others had also been convicted-one killed himself, the rest were pardoned).bombing that took place at a labor demonstration.)
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[[quoteright:308:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/99563_9.jpg]]
Written by Edward Bellamy in 1888, ''Looking Backward: 2000-1887'' was one of the first real Utopia novels in America. The author's brother Francis Bellamy wrote the Pledge of Allegiance. He also had the same political views.
The novel is about Julian West, a FishOutOfTemporalWater, who falls asleep in the year 1887 and wakes up in the year 2000, having slept for 113 years, three months and 11 days (a palindrome, 113311). When he awakes, he finds his country has undergone a bloodless socialist revolution. He proceeds to get lectured on how everything works for a majority of the book by the condescending Dr. Leete, who apparently doesn't do anything else. These lectures comprise entire chapters and discuss things like education, jobs, shopping and such in the year 2000, and how obviously better this utopia is than backward 1887.
Oh, and there's a cheap love story, as Leete's daughter is named Edith, as was Julian's former fiancée. Instant romance, just add water.
Whether it is actually a novel is debatable, as the elements that typically make up a story are underrepresented (aside from pure chapters of exposition). With no real conflict, ''Looking Backward'' actually comes off more as a socialist treatise with plot tacked on in order to make it sell more copies.
Available online at [[http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/624 Project Gutenberg]]. A sequel, ''Equality'' was published in 1897, fleshing out Bellamy's socialist utopia further with more chapter-length lectures on various subjects. Also [[http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/7303 available online]].
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%% Administrivia/ZeroContextExample entries are not allowed on wiki pages. All such entries have been commented out. Add context to the entries before uncommenting them.
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[[quoteright:308:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/99563_9.jpg]]
Written by Edward Bellamy in 1888, ''Looking Backward: 2000-1887'' was one of the first real Utopia novels in America. The author's brother Francis Bellamy wrote the Pledge of Allegiance. He also had the same political views.
The novel is about Julian West, a FishOutOfTemporalWater, who falls asleep in the year 1887 and wakes up in the year 2000, having slept for 113 years, three months and 11 days (a palindrome, 113311). When he awakes, he finds his country has undergone a bloodless socialist revolution. He proceeds to get lectured on how everything works for a majority of the book by the condescending Dr. Leete, who apparently doesn't do anything else. These lectures comprise entire chapters and discuss things like education, jobs, shopping and such in the year 2000, and how obviously better this utopia is than backward 1887.
Oh, and there's a cheap love story, as Leete's daughter is named Edith, as was Julian's former fiancée. Instant romance, just add water.
Whether it is actually a novel is debatable, as the elements that typically make up a story are underrepresented (aside from pure chapters of exposition). With no real conflict, ''Looking Backward'' actually comes off more as a socialist treatise with plot tacked on in order to make it sell more copies.
Available online at [[http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/624 Project Gutenberg]]. A sequel, ''Equality'' was published in 1897, fleshing out Bellamy's socialist utopia further with more chapter-length lectures on various subjects. Also [[http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/7303 available online]].
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%% Administrivia/ZeroContextExample entries are not allowed on wiki pages. All such entries have been commented out. Add context to the entries before uncommenting them.
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Written by Edward Bellamy in 1888,
The novel is about Julian West,
He's taken into the
In the midst of all this, Julian deals with feelings about his complacency in the old society and
Though it's less well-known nowadays, this
Oh,
Whether it is actually a novel is debatable, as
None of
Available online at [[http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/624 Project Gutenberg]]. A sequel, ''Equality'' was published in 1897, fleshing out Bellamy's socialist utopia further with more chapter-length lectures on various
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* AllJustADream: {{Subverted}} by the ending. West thinks this is what happened when he returns to 1887, but it turns out the return itself, and not the rest of the novel, was a dream.
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* AllJustADream: {{Subverted}} by the [[spoiler:the ending. West thinks this is what happened when he returns to 1887, but it turns out the return itself, and not the rest of the novel, was a dream. ]]
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* ExtyYearsFromPublication: The round-number-by-itself variant; the year is 2000. This doubles as FunWithPalindromes, with Julian having slept for exactly 113 years, 3 months and 11 days.
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* SignificantNameOverlap: Edith Leete shares her first name with Edith Bartlett, Julian's fiancée from 1887. [[spoiler:It turns out this is no coincidence: she was named after her great-grandmother.]]
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* DeweyDefeatsTruman: The book correctly predicts the invention of radio, credit cards and skyscrapers but strikes out for the social changes, predicting the US and most of the West would become socialist states.
* FailedFutureForecast: The book, published in 1888, predicted that by 2000 the US, Europe, and much of the world overall would be socialist. Not only did this not happen, but most socialist states collapsed in the late 80s/early 90s. However, it did accurately predict skyscrapers, credit cards and radio (the last being around the corner at the time).
* FailedFutureForecast: The book, published in 1888, predicted that by 2000 the US, Europe, and much of the world overall would be socialist. Not only did this not happen, but most socialist states collapsed in the late 80s/early 90s. However, it did accurately predict skyscrapers, credit cards and radio (the last being around the corner at the time).
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* DeweyDefeatsTruman: FailedFutureForecast:
** The book correctly predicts the invention of radio, credit cards and skyscrapers but strikes out for the social changes, predicting the US and most of the West would become socialist states.
* FailedFutureForecast: ** The book, published in 1888, predicted that by 2000 the US, Europe, and much of the world overall would be socialist. Not only did this not happen, but most socialist states collapsed in the late 80s/early 90s. However, it did accurately predict skyscrapers, credit cards and radio (the last being around the corner at the time).
** The book correctly predicts the invention of radio, credit cards and skyscrapers but strikes out for the social changes, predicting the US and most of the West would become socialist states.
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* NoNameGiven: Dr. Leete's first name is never revealed.
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* NoNameGiven: NoFullNameGiven: Dr. Leete's first name is never revealed.