MORE, (Sir) Thomas

MORE, (Sir) Thomas
(1478-1535)
   UK writer, lawyer, diplomat and politician. The son of a barrister, he was first educated for the Church, but soon decided upon a secular career; he sat in Parliament and gained steadily in political influence, being knighted in 1521 and occupying several posts under Henry VIII until that king's proposed divorce from Catherine of Aragon; TM'ssubsequent refusal to swear to the Act of Supremacy led to his execution. He was canonized in 1935. Throughout his career he was intellectuallyinvolved with the kind of humanism best exemplified by his friend Erasmus (1466-1536), who spent some time in England, and the work by which TM ispopularly remembered, Utopia (Part 2 1516 in Latin; trans Ralphe Robynson including Part 1, written after Part 2, 1551), can be seen as the first substantial humanistic work written by an Englishman.In Part 1, TM, as a character, comes across Raphael Hythloday, a Portuguese seaman who went with Amerigo Vespucci to the New World. Hythloday, having discovered the ISLAND of Utopia on his travels, compares the corrupt state of Europeansociety with the ideal world of Utopia. In Part 2, Utopia is described in detail. It is a humanistic reversal of English society: all goods are held in common; the island's 54 shires are constructed and run rationally by citizens who participate fully in the government, though there are also slaves; arms are borne in self-defence only; there is religious tolerance, though not for atheists. Most of the rational ingredients of the hundreds of UTOPIAS (a word which, in TM's usage, is a pun on ou-topos, nowhere, and eu-topos, good place) that followed TM's initiative can be found in Utopia; what many of its successors lacked, however, was TM's insistencethat his humanistic, rationally governed world was amenable to change, and that his picture of Utopia had caught only a moment in its evolution towards a more perfect constitution for the life of men on Earth.While the majority of readers of Utopia seem to have assumed that TM was recommending the kind of society he would have liked to live in himself, a number of critics have pointed out that some of his suggestions may have been SATIRE; since irony is largely a matter of tone, and since it is difficult for most modern readers to evaluate the tone of a Latin text, it is almost impossible to prove the case one way or the other. Certainly some aspects of TM's Utopia seem, to the modern reader, rigid and even cruel, but to impute similar emotions to TM himself may be anachronistic sentimentality. However, at least in translation, the book has a kind of dry, ambiguous wit which suggests that to read it as a straightforward prospectus of the good life may be simplistic.The degree to which Utopia and utopias in general can be thought of as relevant to sf, particularly GENRE SF of the 20th century, is controversial; it can be argued that theutopian tradition has contributed only minimally to the fundamentally Romance nature of modern sf (but see PROTO SCIENCE FICTION).The amount ofavailable reading on TM and on utopias is huge; some relevant works are listed under UTOPIAS.
   JC/PN
   See also: ECONOMICS; FUTUROLOGY.

Science Fiction and Fantasy Encyclopedia. . 2011.

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  • More,Sir Thomas — More (môr, mōr), Sir Thomas. 1478 1535. English politician, humanist scholar, and writer who refused to comply with the Act of Supremacy, by which English subjects were enjoined to recognize Henry VIII s authority over the pope, and was… …   Universalium

  • More, Sir Thomas — ▪ English humanist and statesman Introduction also called  Saint Thomas More   born February 7, 1478, London, England died July 6, 1535, London; canonized May 19, 1935; feast day June 22  English humanist (humanism) and statesman, chancellor of… …   Universalium

  • MORE, Sir Thomas — (1477/78 1535) Known throughout the world for his authorship of Utopia, Thomas More wrote humanist, polemical, and devotional works in Latin and English. Lawyer, politician, humanist, statesman, and lord chancellor, he was executed on grounds of… …   Renaissance and Reformation 1500-1620: A Biographical Dictionary

  • More, Sir Thomas — (1478–1535)    Statesman, Political Philosopher, Saint and Martyr.    More was educated at the University of Oxford, England, and trained as a lawyer. He became a Member of Parliament in 1504 and rose to be Lord Chancellor, succeeding Cardinal… …   Who’s Who in Christianity

  • More, Sir Thomas — (1478 1535)    Historical and political writer, s. of Sir John M., a Justice of the King s Bench, was b. in London. In his 16th year he was placed in the household of Morton, Archbishop of Canterbury, who was wont to say, This child here waiting… …   Short biographical dictionary of English literature

  • More, Sir Thomas —  (also St. Thomas). (1478–1535) English statesman and author …   Bryson’s dictionary for writers and editors

  • More, Sir Thomas —    See The History of King Richard III (More) …   Encyclopedia of the Wars of the Roses

  • MORE, SIR THOMAS —    Chancellor of England, born in London; was the lifelong friend of Erasmus, and the author of Utopia, an imaginary commonwealth; succeeded Wolsey as Chancellor, but resigned the seals of office because he could not sanction the king s action in …   The Nuttall Encyclopaedia

  • Sir Thomas More (play) — Sir Thomas More is an Elizabethan play by Anthony Munday and others that depicts the life of Thomas More. It survives only in a single manuscript, now owned by the British Library. Its main claim to fame is that three pages of it may have been… …   Wikipedia

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  • Sir Thomas Metham —     Sir Thomas Metham     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Sir Thomas Metham     A knight, confessor of the Faith, died in York Castle, 1573. He was eldest son of Thomas Metham, of Metham, Yorkshire, and Grace, daughter of Thomas Pudsey, of Barford, and …   Catholic encyclopedia

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