Most books on Atlantis take one of two paths. They either pursue the lost city as if it were a hidden geographical secret waiting to be recovered, or they dismiss it as a famous but exhausted fable. Atlantis Revisited takes a different path. It argues that Atlantis is best understood not as a single historical proposition but as one of the most durable civilizational legends in the Western archive.
The book begins where it must: with Plato’s Timaeus and Critias, where Atlantis first appears as a philosophically staged pseudo-history—morally charged, politically comparative, historically suggestive, and deliberately unfinished. From there, the argument follows the long afterlife of Atlantis across later antiquity, Renaissance humanism, utopian writing, and, above all, Francis Bacon’s New Atlantis, where the Atlantean frame is redirected toward organized inquiry, institutional design, and the future of knowledge. The study then turns to the nineteenth century, when Ignatius Donnelly transformed Atlantis into a totalizing origin-story for civilization, and to the darker modern afterlives in which Atlantis became entangled with racial myth, nationalism, pseudoarchaeology, and the displacement of indigenous achievement. These chapters show that Atlantis is not an innocent cultural curiosity. It has repeatedly functioned as a site of ideological projection and explanatory excess.
Yet Atlantis also continued to evolve in more expansive and revealing ways. Modern literature, comics, cinema, television, games, music, and digital culture turned Atlantis into a portable world-frame: spectacular, serial, participatory, and endlessly reusable. The book therefore treats Atlantis not only as a classical inheritance but as a modern media object, a civilizational mirror, and a myth of recoverable loss. It asks why Atlantis persists, why it scales so well across media, and why advanced societies repeatedly return to stories of hidden greatness and catastrophic disappearance.
The final synthesis argues that Atlantis did not merely survive; it was progressively made into a civilization-legend by successive reinterpretive regimes. Plato created the foundational form. Bacon turned it toward institutional futurity. Donnelly literalized it.
Nationalism and pseudoarchaeology weaponized it. Modern media scaled it. The climate era has begun to reactivate it once more as a warning about civilizational fragility.
Written for scholars, serious general readers, and anyone interested in the history of ideas, myth, political thought, pseudoarchaeology, and media culture, Atlantis Revisited offers a comprehensive and deeply interdisciplinary account of what Atlantis became after Atlantis.
Elan Moritz is an independent scholar, scientist, and writer whose work ranges across the history of ideas, philosophy, institutional design, science governance, and long-horizon civilizational thought. His recent projects examine how foundational myths, philosophical constructions, and knowledge institutions continue to shape the possibilities of advanced societies. Alongside studies of scientific governance and the future of institutional design, his work on Atlantis investigates how one ancient narrative was transformed into a far-reaching civilizational legend through philosophy, utopia, pseudoarchaeology, modern media, and digital culture. He writes from Philadelphia under the Eagles Perch Press imprint.