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Practical utopia : the many lives of Dartington Hall

Part of the Modern British Histories series
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Dartington Hall was a social experiment of kaleidoscopic vitality, set up in Devon in 1925 by a fabulously wealthy American heiress, Dorothy Elmhirst (nee Whitney), and her Yorkshire-born husband, Leonard.

It quickly achieved international fame with its progressive school, craft production and wide-ranging artistic endeavours.

Dartington was a residential community of students, teachers, farmers, artists and craftsmen committed to revivifying life in the countryside.

It was also a socio-cultural laboratory, where many of the most brilliant interwar minds came to test out their ideas about art, society, spirituality and rural regeneration.

To this day, Dartington Hall remains a symbol of countercultural experimentation and a centre for arts, ecology and social justice.

Practical Utopia presents a compelling portrait of a group of people trying to live out their ideals, set within an international framework, and demonstrates Dartington's tangled affinities with other unity-seeking projects across Britain and in India and America.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1316517977 / 9781316517970
Hardback
28/04/2022
United Kingdom
English
viii, 313 pages : illustrations (black and white)
24 cm
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