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The truth about Utopias

Utopias are kingdoms of the imagination. So why bother with them?

How this video happened

What began as "Frank Lloyd Wright's Insane Utopia" became a much more meditative piece once I learned about the aforementioned "Insane Utopia."

I love doing a close read and deep research on a topic, but the more I dug into Wright's Broadacre City, the less it seemed to merit a super literal breakdown. How could this have been a realistic plan? Why was his writing larded with prose that was a cross between new age philosophy and influencer marketing? What did it actually mean?

Reading the papers linked below and talking with Stewart Hicks made me realize that using Broadacre as a lens for Utopias might be a more sustainable way to approach the topic. There were two benefits: I'd get to experiment with a different type of story, but I'd also still get to do the deep research that I find most rewarding (and I hope you do, too).

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Here's a link to the reaction video (for some paid tiers). I didn't send out a separate notification for this, let me know if that's a problem.

Programming note - if you ever do become a paid subscriber, do it via the web rather than Patreon's iOs app (existing subscribers don't need to worry). Apple has added a 30% fee that they will carve out of your money if you sign up via the app. Through web or Android, it's totally normal.

The class divide in Broadacre City

Once you realize you don't understand Utopias, you start to understand them. This article is going to take the same course as the video: literal-minded explanatory ambitions, followed by an ascent to the mushy.

I had a superficial awareness of Thomas More's Utopia before starting this story, and I felt duty-bound to do some Wikipedia skimming. Lots of blather followed, but I did pick up on the satirical nature of the book and the presence of some weird decidely non-Utopic things, like slavery. We use Utopia as shorthand for a perfect world, but that shorthand is woefully inadequate.

That's clear in the world of Broadacre City, especially when it comes to class. I would have expected a certain amount of equality in an imaginary world where every person gets one acre of land, no questions asked — it seems like a Commie plot! The ample common goods (markets, community centers, public fair grounds, some sort of weird announcement pole that I don't fully understand) further underscores this impression.

Of course, not only was Wright not a Communist, but Broadacre isn't very equitable at all. It includes lots of class divisions you'll find in the real world — apartment homes, workers' dwellings, homes above factories, and even plans for conveniently splitting up the acreage to maximize value.

Here's a plan for that:

And here's a plan for some lake barges that were, apparently available to anyone, including anybody who wanted to live #Vanlife circa 1935. They look awesome.

At the same time, the models show that the elites literally lived above everyone else — they're the topographically privileged group in the lower left corner of the model.

And of course, there were the super richies who got to enjoy life in the House on the Mesa, a mansion that was designed for rich people

I think there are two approaches to the weirdness of this, both of which mirror what I ended up doing in the video. The first approach is to look at it as a literal expression of Wright's personal class hierarchy, and there's some evidence for such a thing existing. As an architect, after all, he'd spent some time working for some very rich clients without being rich himself, so he probably felt pretty status aware. There's also evidence that Wright was very sympathetic to the American First movement, which was sort of the United States of Nazis. Their nativist sentiments might explain some of the "scum" that Wright hoped to prevent in his Broadacre plan. A lot of these architects seem to be in the fascist camp.

But I favor a less literal, more expressive approach like what I ended up with in the video: this Utopia is part of Wright's personal identity - he's expressing elements of himself through this model and design. That continues to the notion of class. The worker, the elite, the school leader — they all coexist within Wright and, as a result, they all show up in Broadacre City. The evidence is the model itself, beautiful but nonsensical, showing the things that will never be in the most mesmerizing ways.

Sources for the video

The truth about Utopias The truth about Utopias

Comments

Oh I'm sure- especially Brave New World. He probably liked that world though haha. I know he was also into this utopia book - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erewhon (where the clothing co. gets its name)

Phil Edwards

Hubs is has been doing some business trips in Detroit so your recent videos on FLW have been extremely interesting!! This video and talking about utopias reminds me of Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury and Brave New World by Aldous Huxley. I’m sure FLW may have read these two book, but both books give interesting points to key scenes and odd locations like you mention in your video: an atrium, a conservatory, a light house, etc.

M.P. Behrens

How about these smaller scale versions. https://www.lakeadventures.com/

Desmond Suarez

yes definitely! and some even in america (i vaguely wanna do one about east solano) https://eastsolanoplan.com/

Phil Edwards

I just finished watching this video. I have always been a fan of Frank's work and I appreciated the psychoanalysis. I couldn't stop thinking about what the new utopias that Saudi Arabia and other countries are working on says about their goals.

Desmond Suarez


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