Mankind in the Making

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Mankind_in_the_Making an entity of type: Thing

Mankind in the Making (1903) is H.G. Wells's sequel to Anticipations (1901). Mankind in the Making analyzes the "process" of "man's making," i.e. "the great complex of circumstances which mould the vague possibilities of the average child into the reality of the citizen of the modern state." Taking an aggressive tone in criticizing many aspects of contemporary institutions, Wells proposed a doctrine he called "New Republicanism," which "tests all things by their effect upon the evolution of man." rdf:langString
rdf:langString Mankind in the Making
rdf:langString Mankind in the Making
rdf:langString Mankind in the Making
xsd:string Chapman & Hall(U.K.) &Charles Scribner's Sons(U.S.)
xsd:integer 41600090
xsd:integer 945833104
rdf:langString UK
rdf:langString Sociology
rdf:langString English
xsd:integer 7058
rdf:langString ix + 429
rdf:langString September 1903
rdf:langString Mankind in the Making
rdf:langString Mankind in the Making (1903) is H.G. Wells's sequel to Anticipations (1901). Mankind in the Making analyzes the "process" of "man's making," i.e. "the great complex of circumstances which mould the vague possibilities of the average child into the reality of the citizen of the modern state." Taking an aggressive tone in criticizing many aspects of contemporary institutions, Wells proposed a doctrine he called "New Republicanism," which "tests all things by their effect upon the evolution of man." The volume consists of eleven "papers" that were first published in the British Fortnightly Review from September 1902 to September 1903 and in the American Cosmopolitan, and an appendix. It was reprinted by Chapman and Hall in 1906 in a cheaper edition, and again in 1914, on the eve of World War I.
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