Freeland: A Social Anticipation

audiobook

Freeland: A Social Anticipation

by Theodor Hertzka

EN·~19 hours·7 chapters

Chapters

7 total

FREELAND - A SOCIAL ANTICIPATION - BY - DR. THEODOR HERTZKA - TRANSLATED BY - ARTHUR RANSOM - 1891

0:06

TRANSLATOR'S NOTE

2:25

AUTHOR'S PREFACE

41:23

FREELAND - A SOCIAL ANTICIPATION - BOOK I - CHAPTER I

3:32:27

BOOK II - CHAPTER VIII

3:29:59

BOOK III - CHAPTER XIII

7:04:19

BOOK IV - CHAPTER XXIII

4:43:37

Description

In this bold, forward‑looking work, the author examines the paradox of a world capable of producing limitless wealth yet still haunted by poverty and social unrest. He traces how modern industry, despite its marvels, has generated over‑production, protective tariffs, and labor strife, leaving countless people without the basic necessities they ought to enjoy. By critiquing the prevailing economic doctrines of his time, he invites listeners to reconsider the very foundations of wealth distribution and social organization.

The narrative then turns to a concrete proposal: a new community—Freeland—planned for a tract of land in British East Africa. Here, the author envisions a society built on rational, cooperative principles that harness technological progress for the common good, free from the old constraints of guilds, trusts, and restrictive trade policies. As the first act unfolds, readers are drawn into the hopeful discussions of how such a settlement might be organized, financed, and governed, offering a fresh lens on how humanity could reshape its future.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~19 hours (1127K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Suzanne Shell, Christopher Lund and PG Distributed Proofreaders

Release date

2006-02-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

Subjects

About the author

Theodor Hertzka

Theodor Hertzka

1845–1924

A journalist, economist, and novelist who mixed big political ideas with storytelling, he is best known for imagining a cooperative society in the utopian novel Freeland: A Social Anticipation. His work connects the world of late 19th-century economics, reform movements, and speculative fiction.

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