EN
In H. G. Wells’s and Kang Youwei’s early 20th century utopias, world governments take centre stage by proposing global political orders to prevent large-scale wars. Both texts propose not only the centralization of military and juridical power, but also the homogenization of culture and language as well as race. Despite both texts’ ostentatious cosmopolitanism, however, their visions are compromised by their (Anglo- and Sinocentric) ethnocentrism and racism. In light of the complex narrative forms of both texts, this article proposes an alternative to judging them by today’s liberal values. Their sprawling form requires a consideration of their full heterogeneity, including Wells’s use of narrative irony and Kang’s intergalactic vision of cosmic citizenship.