The Co-opolitan: A Story of the Co-operative Commonwealth of Idaho
About This Book
A first-person narrator in Chicago during 1897 depicts a nation of vast material abundance and widespread destitution, recounting personal financial loss and public despair. The narrative critiques the limits of purely political remedies and argues that lasting reform requires industrial co-operation that can rival competitive profits. The author outlines a strategy to build large-scale co-operative enterprises that accumulate capital and influence, thereby transforming economic relations and eventually affecting governance. Interwoven with social observation, the account follows the narrator’s encounters and efforts to explore practical prospects for establishing a co-operative commonwealth on American soil.