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| LeGuin, Ursula: The Dispossessed (Study Guide)
LeGuin, Ursula: The Dispossessed (Study Guide)
Study Guide for Ursula LeGuin: The Dispossessed
(1974)
Introduction
After World War I, the writing of utopian fiction gradually declined, until
thegenre almost disappeared in mid-century, to be replaced by dystopias
(descriptions of ultimately evil places) like George Orwell`s
Nineteen-Eighty-Four (1948). However, in the mid-seventies therewas a
spate of new utopias written by Americans inspired by the upsurge ofsocial
reform begun in the late sixties and continuing into the new decade. Themost
famous examples are Ernest Callenbach`s Ecotopia, Samuel R.Delany`s
Triton, and this novel, though there are many otherexamples.
What differentiated these new utopias was their attempt to evade the
traditional criticisms of the old utopias like Edward Bellamy`s Looking
Backward: that they were static, boring, and unattainable. After all,
"utopia" means "good place," not perfect place. There seemed no reason to
believe that all of humanity`s problems could be solved through improved
social organization; but it seemed possible that some of them might
be.
It is important to understand that one of the main functions of utopias,
sincePlato and Thomas More, has been to function as a critique of existing
society,providing a kind of benchmark against which the flaws of real cultures
can bemore clearly revealed. Their proposals for reform have not always been
seriouslymeant.
The original paperback edition of The Dispossessed~bore on its cover
this description: "The magnificent epic of an ambiguous utopia!" This
description struck so many readers as apt that An Ambiguous Utopia became
thought of as a subtitle for the work, and in recent printings it has even been
adopted as the official subtitle. LeGuin has said she was attempting to work out
how an anarchist society would functi on in reality. She was particularly
inspired by the work of American pacifist/anarchist/reformer Paul Goodman.
Anarchism, which grew out of French social philosophy of the eighteenth
century, posits that many of humanity`s problems come from living under
governments. Jean-Jacques Rousseau had begun The Social Contract by
writing "Man is born free, and is everywhere in chains." One solution to this
paradoxical situation was to inaugurate representative democracies; but the
anarchists found even this solutio n too confining, for they argued that all
governments, whatever their official form, quickly become plutocracies
(societies governed by the rich). Many socialists and communists argued that the
path to reform lay through collective ownership of the means o f production to
ensure that there would be no rich. The transition to full economic
democracy would be managed by a centralized, all-powerful government. Anarchists
argued that such centralization could never lead to the hoped-for decentralized
egalitarian society: centralization leads only to more centralization, they
claimed. If people want freedom, they must claim it directly.
Anarchists differ a good deal among themselves, but they tend to share a
high regard for voluntary cooperation, local control, and mutual tolerance.
Sharing is promoted as a social ideal, but only on a voluntary basis. All of
these are values much promoted in the counterculture of the "Sixties" (which
lasted from approximately 1967 to 1974); and the novel is clearly a product of
its time. In many ways, Annares is an idealized hippie commune.
But LeGuin deliberately chose to depict Annares as flawed, for two main
reasons: 1) it made her novel more credible: everyone objected to the
perfectionism of the old-time utopias and 2) by focusing on Anarres` flaws, its
ideals were made all the more appa rent. When Shevek goes to Urras he learns how
deeply he has absorbed the values of the society he has rebelled against. How
one reacts to Annares will depend powerfully upon one`s own social back ground
and values. To many of its earliest readers Anarres, however flawed, clearly
presented a preferable ideal to contemporary American society. Its stress on
sharing, on volunteerism, and on tolerance was highly attractive. To some
contemporary readers, Anarres seems rather like a nightmare. While it is crucial
to understand that LeGuin did not expect or want this reaction from readers, it
is interesting to explore why it developed. What values in current American
society run counter to the ideals of Ana rres? Keep trying to answer this
question as you explore the novel.
LeGuin often presents an Anarran value by showing its limits. She is not
sayingthese values are undesirable or cannot be attained, but that there are
humantendencies which may frustrate their full realization. Sometimes the"flaws"
she presents are so mi nor as to constitute merely a cleverway of avoiding the
criticism of perfectionism. It is as if someone were todescribe a world in which
AIDS had been conquered by complaining that other,less threatening diseases had
become more frequent as the result of peopleabandoning "safe sex" practices: one
would have to be very naive notto realize that the real point of such a
description is to praise the conquestof AIDS, though in a back-handed
way.
The philosophy of Anarres was provided by the philosopher Laia Odo, the
founder of Odonianism. LeGuin later wrote a remarkable story about her entitled
"The Day Before the Revolution." She was an anarchist philosopher and rebel in
the dictatorial st ate of A-IO on the planet of Urras. Her most influential book
is called The Analogy. Beginning the day after her death, her followers
led a revolution against that state which eventuated in their settlement of a
neighboring planet, poor in agricultural resources, but rich in ore, named
Anarres. The two worlds are of approximately equal size, but each regards the
other as its "moon." The symbol of Odonianism is the circle, which encloses all
individuals within the group and which also emphasizes a holistic approach to
life. Avoiding pyramidal hierarchy, the circle promotes the view that "true
departure is return." How is this slogan illustrated by Shevek`s story as told
in this novel? But the circle can also be limiting. What circle at the very
beginning of the novel indicates the limits of Odonianism?
The form of the novel is also circular. It ends where it began. Starting
atmid-point in the plot with Shevek`s departure for Urras, the next
chapterdescribes his childhood. The chapters alternate from that point on
indescribing events before and after his departure, each strand of
chaptersprogressing in its own chronological order.
LeGuin has sometimes been severely taken to task for choosing a
maleprotagonist. Her initial rather flip defense was to say that as a
sciencefiction writer she enjoyed trying to enter alien minds, so she was
naturallydrawn to portraying men. In fact, most of the protagonists of her early
novelsare male. But her critics overlooked the fact that her novel incorporates
manyfeminist values, even if it is not a radical feminist utopia. In some ways,
itis especially revealing to have these values reflected through a
masculineconsciousness. Try to identify specific passages in the novel which
convey afeminist sensibility, and also try to guess which passages might have
givenfeminists offense.
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Chapter 1, Chapter 2,
Chapter 3, Chapter 4,
Chapter 5, Chapter 6,
Chapter 7, Chapter 9,
Chapter10, Chapter 11,
Chapter 12, Chapter 13
The title of the novel is a reference to Fyodor Dostoyevsky`s much less
sympathetic work about Russian anarchists, The Dispossessed, also known
in English as The Devils.
Chapter 1
The wall described in the opening symbolizes several of the themes of the
novel.Look for other references to walls in the text. What is the meaning of
thissentence: "It enclosed the universe, leaving Anarres outside, free?"Can you
see any irony in it? A "syndic" would be a representative of a"syndicate."
Although now the term is used almost exclusively in thepopular press in the
expression "crime syndicate," syndicalism was atone time an important movement
for social reform, urging the formation ofvoluntary groups to own and
democratically control factories and other means ofproduction. Syndicalists are
anarchists in that they oppose any form of formal,centralized government,
preferring society to be organized through voluntarylabor unions. The most
successful syndicalist organization in American historywas the IWW (Industrial
Workers of the World), which peaked in the years beforeWorld War I. Syndicalists
highly value power exercised from the bottom up (theIWW even organized hoboes)
and reject authority imposed from the top down. Theytend to be equally hostile
to capitalists and communists. In the paragraphbeginning "People often came
out," what evidence can you find offeminist values? Of a lack of radical
feminist values?
What does it implyabout the foreman`s culture that she cannot understand
the term"bastard" in either its literal or figurative senses? What does
herreaction to the pistol tell you about her culture? What qualities make
theOdonians poor at mob action? What does their awkwardness in this situation
tellyou about their society`s values? What kind of values make knives preferable
tofirearms as weapons? Do these different values suggest that "human nature" has
changed? Explain. Why do you suppose LeGuin begins her novel bydepicting the
Anarrans at their worst?
Shevek is a brilliant scientist, but his world does not give titles
like"doctor" to indicate ranking. "Doctor" is merely adescriptive term for a
physician. What is "the one law he had everacknowledged?" What impression does
this opening scene give you o fShevek`s character? What do you think this means:
"I will go to Abbenay andunbuild walls"? What effect does being vaccinated have
on Shevek? How doesthis incident illustrate the limits of pure freedom?
LeGuin acknowledgesthe reluctance of English-speakers to speak frankly
about excretion by inventingher very own term for "toilet" (a word which
originally means a tableat which a woman applies make-up). There has never been
such a word in English."Outhouse," "water closet," "WC,""lavatory" (meaning
"place where one bathes),"bathroom" (as in "going to the . . ."): all are
euphemisms.The use of "shit-stool" suggests that the Annarans are not ashamed
oftheir bodily functions and see no need for euphemisms. As becomes clear in
amoment, it is also a society which has no use for pajamas. What does the
watervalve in the washstand tell Shevek about the society that produced it?
Whatpassage a page or so later reflects the same ecological concern? This is a
goodexample of utopian fiction`s (and SF`s) ability to comment from the outside
onaspects of our society that we take for granted. Remember that at the time
thisnovel was written, long hair w as a symbol of freedom, short hair or
shavenheads a symbol of conformism and repression. Why is Shevek so upset about
thedoor being locked? What does the doctor mean when he says that Shevek is
not"an alien in the same sense"? Why didn`t Shevek bring any money onthis trip?
What quality in the captain did Odo call "the creation
ofpseudo-species"?
What is Shevek`s attitude toward religion? Look for the wall metaphor in
the paragraph beginning "All their conversations were like this. . . ." What is
Shevek `s reaction to Kimoe`s arguments for a sexual division of labor? Evaluate
his arguments. What does it mean to say that it feels as if there is "a woman in
every table top?"Why are the Iotis so excited about Shevek`s arrival? What
values do Ioti women`s fashions reflect?
Chapter 2
We now shift back in time to Shevek`s childhood. What does "Divlab"
probably stand for? What does the struggle for the spot of sunlight tell us
about Shevek? About his society? In the episode from Sheveks` eighth year, we
see him having independently reinvented one of the paradoxes of the ancient
Greek philosopher Zeno. What does this incident tell us about Shevek? About his
society? The teacher appeals to the feelings of the group to exclude Shevek.
What is really going on? What does Shevek like about numbers? Follow the term
"decad" and see whether you can figure out about how long a decad is. What is
implied by the fact that Shevek knows his father is going to "copulate with a
woman named Pipar?" How many facts about Anarran society can you tease out from
this one passage? What does the wall imagery in Shevek`s dream
suggest?
The third passage, from Shevek`s eleventh or twelfth year, begins with a
reference to the Fort in Drio, where Odo was imprisoned for years. Look for it
later in the novel. The game of "prison" that the children play seems exciting
at first, then terrifying . What is this episode meant to convey? There is much
more to it than a simple statement about "human nature." Some critics have
objected to LeGuin portraying the young boys as eliminating girls from their
company. What do you think of this criticism? What can you deduce about the
nature of adolescent male/female relations from the following passage, from
Shevek`s mid-teens? In the preceding chapter it was me ntioned in passing that
Ioti women shave off their fine body hair: here, when the hairy corpses of
children are mentioned, it is made clear that this hair, fine though it may be,
is more prominent among Shevek`s race than among humans. What is Tirin`s reac
tion to the anti-Urrasti propaganda they are given in school? Why is Shevek`s
reaction interesting, given the previous chapter? Summarize and evaluate
Sheveks` explanation to Tirin of why the Anarresti are not "forbidden" to help
the Urrasti?
The afforestation project is meant to be a heroic undertaking, an inspiring
example of cooperative effort that, for all its grueling aspects, shows the
Anararresti at their best. Is this forced labor? Explain. What does the footnote
to "Tadde" tell us abou t the nature of Odonian families? Gimar is not described
as a conventional beauty. What do we know about her looks? Does monogamy
conflict with the other values of Odonianism? See the later passage discussing
the language of sex. What do you think of the argument over whether women are
natural propertarians or anarchists? Why is it insulting to call someone a
profiteer? Why don`t passersby intervene to stop the fight between Shevek and
Shevet? What does the next passage convey about the normal course of sexual
development in Odonian society? What hard lesson does Mitis teach Shevek when
she sends him off to work with Sabul? What does Tirin`s beggarman skit tell us
about the Anarresti? At the party Shevek meets his wife-to-be, the tall girl
with the short hair. How else is she described? The argument she makes is a
criticism frequently made by anarchists of Marxists. Communist society was
supposed to build a paradise on earth through self-sacrifice; but many Marxists
came to view the rejection of worldly comforts as good in itself. The problem in
Russia was an extremely low level of industrial development which meant that the
Communists had to coerce the population into industrializing whereas Marx always
assumed that industrialization would have taken place under bourgeois domination
in the period preceding any Communist revolution. The Odonians do not lack
technology. What factor makes their society one of scarcity rather than
abundance, encouraging the ascetic views which the girl rejects? Is it the fault
of their social organization that they enjoy few
luxuries?
Chapter 3
Shevek thought of "airships" earlier; now it becomes clear that these are
dirigibles. What advantages do dirigibles have over airplanes in a society such
as his? What appeals to Shevek about Urras? Is Chifoilisk correct in saying
"Human nature is human nature?" What about the context suggests he is wrong,
though his insight about Sabul is essentially correct?
"Ainsetain of Terra" is of course Einstein of Earth. Humans are "aliens,"
as are the Hainish. Le Guin has written several novels set among the Hainish,
who are ultimately the ancestors of all these races. Though it is not necessary
to know those novels to understand The Dispossessed, it is important to
understand that Urras is not a clone of Earth. As we shall see, it is neither so
scrupulously maintained as Anarres nor so exploited as Earth.
How do Shevek`s memories about Mitis and his education contrast with the
following conversation about the women Shevek had met at the party the previous
night? Pae is a "moderate" on the issue of education for women. What is his
position? What else is being said about gender in this passage? What is Shevek`s
reaction to Oiie`s comment that he comes as an emissary of his society? How does
the PDC function on Anarres? What pleasant surprises does Shevek
experience?
As is revealed in Chapter 11, the Earth people call Anarresti and Urrasti
"Cetians" because their planets orbit the prominent star Tau Ceti, eleven
light-years from Earth.
What does Shevek`s comment "Perh aps our woes are inescapable" imply about
the society he comes from? Thu is a sort of Stalinist, communist state as
described by Pae. Benbili corresponds more or less to the underdeveloped world
of Earth. Study the paragraph beginning "Traveling by car or train." What
messages is LeGuin conveying here? Is desire for profit the only natural human
motive for work? How do the newspapers manage to censor Shevek despite their
favorable reporting on his speech?
To understand the issues involved in Shevek`s research, one must know some
basic physics. Relativity theory tells us that no object can travel faster than
the speed of light. In fact, as one approaches the speed of light, time seems to
pass more slowly relative to one`s starting point. Thus, a voyager from Earth
taking a ten-year journey at near-light speeds would (depending on the speed of
travel) come home again to find that many more years had passed on Earth,
obliterating everyone who ever cared about the voyager`s expedition. Yet few
stars are as close to Earth as ten light-years (the distance light travels in 10
years). These facts make distant interstellar travel, trade, and warfare
seemingly quite impractical and virtually pointless: a depressing conclusion
that is usually dealt with in science fiction mentioned about either by ignoring
it or coming up with various pseudo-scientific concepts such as "space warps"
and magic "faster than light" (FTL) drives. LeGuin suggests that our inability
to conceive of faster-than-light travel is a limitation of human science which
might be overcome by a combination of elements from the Hainish, Earth humans,
and the Anarresti and the Urrasti. "Sequency" refers to what physicists
sometimes call "time`s arrow:" the fact that time moves in only one direction,
one event after another. "Simultaneity" implies that time can be viewed
differently, as is explained by Shevek at the party scene in Chapter 7. LeGuin`s
proposal is no more scientific than the magic dilithium crystals which power the
Enterprise; but it makes a striking metaphor for the synergy which can
result from cooperation among different peoples.
What message does the Fort in Drio convey to Shevek? Note that the chapter
ends with the Odonian symbol of empty hands.
Chapter 4
In what way is Anarres a colony? What motivates Anarresti to take on
defense duty? Why did Odo advocate decentralization? What fact made it difficult
for her to implement her anarchist philosophy? The clustering of similar
businesses together in neighborho ods is very characteristic of pre-industrial
cities, as are other features of Abbenay. What energy sources are used in
Abbenay? What is implied by the open-fronted shops, the unlocked doors? Electric
trolleys like those described in this chapter used to provide inexpensive and
relatively unpolluting transp ortation in almost every town until the automobile
took over. Many environmentalists still consider light rail a superior form of
transportation. One perhaps paranoid theory (illustrated in Who Killed Roger
Rabbit? )has it that the automobile manufacturers and petroleum companies
conspired to destroy the old trolleys. What does the scene in which Shevek
encounters the statue of Odo convey? How does Sabul exploit Shevek? What does
the discussion of living/sleeping arrangements tell us about Odonian society?
How much freedom is available? How much privacy? What do Shevek`s problems with
Sabul tell us about the limits/problems of Odonian scientific research? What
does Shevek`s meeting with Rulag tell us about Odonian family life and gender
roles?
Chapter 5
What are the good and bad points of Shevek`s students? How do they react to
his decision not to give grades? What does Shevek`s reply to their complaints
mean? It may seem bizarre that students are not allowed to marry, but this was a
common rule in colleges on our planet not so long ago. In fact, by allowing
professors to marry, Urras is being more liberal than nineteenth-century England
or America. Shevek is shocked by the price of the fur coat in the window. Why?
But the high price of this coat is also a sig n of what good aspect of Ioti
society? One of the classic criticisms that socialists make of capitalist
society is the "alienation" that it causes in the workers, the product of whose
labor is separated from them, unlike the old guild system in which the c
raftsman was also the dealer. Judging by Shevek`s reaction to Ioti stores, how
would the Odonians seem to have overcome this problem? When the communist
Chifoilisk from Thu tries to get Shevek to think of him as an ally, what is
Shevek`s reaction? Why does he claim that the Odonians are not idealists? Is
this an altogether negative observation? Explain. What are his criticisms of
Thuvian socialism? Odo`s saying that where there`s property there`s theft
strongly resembles the classic saying by the socialist Proudhon, "Property is
theft." Can you distinguish between the two? What is the significance of the
fact that Oiie`s children are the first to ask Shevek to describe Anarres?
Explain and evaluate the Anarresti system for getting dangerous, hard jobs done
a nd their method of controlling uncooperative behavior. The wall symbol returns
at the end of this chapter, in Shevek`s dream. How is it used
here?
Chapter 6
Why is Desar`s hoarding of goods irrational? What attitudes characterize
the Odononian approach to the arts? How are they different from the dominant
attitudes in our culture? When Bedap mentions the conversation about suicide and
suffering, he lets us kno w that the tall woman was Takver, Shevek`s wife-to-be.
What function does the symbol of the wall p erform in Bedap`s talk with Shevek?
What is Bedap`s theory of how ideas are crushed in Odonian society? What does he
think the basic problems are? What is Shevek`s answer? (Hint: it is the same
answer that used to be given to justify the repressive governm ent of the
U.S.S.R.) Note that throughout his childhood and youth Shevek is mostly a very
traditional Odonian, shocked when others attack the system. Although he will
become a rebel, he does so reluctantly. What effect does this pattern have on
the novel? Does it make more credible his renewed appreciation of Odonianism
when he is on Urras? Why is it blasphemy that kids are memorizing Odo`s words?
How does Tirin`s punishment (which is strongly reminiscent of the Chinese
Cultural Revolution) illustrate what has gone wrong on Anarres? Are these flaws
inevitable, do you think? What does it tell us about Anarresti culture that
Shevek can pair with Bedap for a while even though he is "pretty definitely
heterosexual?" How do Salas` difficulties in music parallel the problems Tirin
talked about earlier? Describe Shevek`s second encounter with Takver: how is it
different from the typical encounter of lovers in fiction? The relationship
between Takver and Shevek has come under heavy criticism from some quarters. Can
y ou see why? Note that there is no wedding. Anarchists generally reject the
idea that the state should play any role in formalizing relationships. How does
Shevek view Takver`s relationship with nature? In the scene of the couple lying
out under the moon we are reminded of the fine fur that covers the skin of these
people.
Chapter 7
Note the recurrence of the wall symbol at the top of the second page of
thischapter. What does it stand for here? To what sort of familiar Earth event
doesthe uprising in Benbili and A-Io`s response to it correspond? What does
Shevekhear the birds singi ng on campus? What does Shevek learn about sex and
genderon Urras in his relationship with Vea? Why does she think the Odonians
have nomorality? Why does she prefer a fixed morality? What does Shevek say is
thecharacteristic that allows the strongest to survive? Can you make arguments
foror against this proposition? Explain the meaning of Shevek`s statement
"Tobreak a promise is to deny the reality of the past; therefore it is to deny
thehope of a real future." What does Shevek`s long answer to Vea`s questionabout
what Anarres is really like tell us about his currentfeelings concerning
the two planets? Note the recurrence of the wall image atthe end of this speech.
Why do es the sexual encounter between Shevek and Vea goso badly? At the end of
the chapter Pae discusses the danger of an uprising, andmentions the possibility
of a general strike. This was the chief revolutionaryweapon advocated by
syndicalists. Although most were not pacifists, theythought an armed revolution
unlikely to succeed. The idea was to organize themajority of the population into
labor unions which would then simultaneouslyagree to go on strike, essentially
bringing the country to a halt, until thegovernment was forced to step down.
There have been a few notable generalstrikes in history, some of them fairly
successful.
Chapter 8
Why does Takver have such trouble understanding the concept of hell?
Shevek`sdifficulties in getting his work published are a reminder of the old
saying thatthe press is free for anyone who owns one. The perpetual excuse of
the Sovietgovernment for not printing unorthodox ideas a shortage of paper is
alluded toas well. One of the major agenda items of the women`s movement in the
seventieswas childbirth reform: including less use of drugs (indeed an end to
treatingchildbirth as a medical emergency rather than as a natural event), labor
in themore efficient sitting posture, an end to the practice of whisking the
newborn offto a nursery instead of letting it bond with its mother first, and
the use ofmidwives instead of doctors for normal childbirths. All of these
points andsome others are illustrated in this childbirth scene, which was
utopian at thetime it was written but fairly commonplace now.What are the
advantages and disadvantages of seeing monogamy as a purelyvoluntary, private
institution without any institutionalization? Does LeGuinimply that monogamy is
superior to other forms of relationships? What are thenormal penalties for rape?
Divlab`s willingness to separate couples for reasonsof work will remind some of
Chinese government policies; but couples in our ownculture are often separated
for work reasons. Is the Anarresti system more likethe Chinese or like ours? In
a capitalist depression, many people are withoutwork at all while those still
working must labor extremely hard to survive. Whatis the Odonian alternative to
this pattern? Why are most telephone calls onAnarres long distance? The episode
of the drought is meant to convey how thissociety deals with such a crisis. Be
careful that your concern over Takver`s andShevek`s separation does not obscure
everything else that is going on here. Howare they motivated in making the
decisions they do? What works well during thiscrisis? Badly? Why is Pravic not a
good swearing language? What weakness in thestudent-centered education system is
revealed by Shipeg`s career?
Chapter 9
Why does Shevek say the bread he has eaten on Urras has betrayed him? The
ansible, which allows instantaneous communication (in some mysterious way
evading the Einsteinian light-speed limit), is a feature of many of LeGuin`s
stories. It is characteristic of her socially-oriented SF that interstellar
communication should be more im portant than transportation. Note that Terrans
are thought of by Shevek as "jealous wall builders." The search for a unified
field theory discussed here has still been unsuccessful, though advances have
been made since Einstein`s time. The wall metaphor re curs in the paragraph
beginning "He had been groping and grabbing after certainty" and again on the
next page in the paragraph beginning "After a while he got up shakily. . . ."
What does Efor tell Shevek that helps motivate him to break out of the univer
sity grounds and contact the rebels? What is the essence of the argument between
Tuio Maedda and "the girl" over the use of force? What does Shevek mean by
telling the crowd "You cannot make the Revolution. You can only be the
Revolution"? Describe the two views of proper military organization argued by
Atro and Shevek.
Chapter 10
In what way are the remarks about men and women made by the driver to
Shevek in the paragraph beginning "By damn, I agree with that!" rather
traditional? When Shevek sees Sadik again he notes her furry face. When Sadik
says "You can share the handkerchief I use," she is uttering for the first time
a line which Shevek remembered in an earlier chapter. How are the attractiveness
of youth and sexual desire linked in the Shevek/Takver relationship? How long is
an emergency long work shift? How does Tirin`s play answer the common objection
that a communist/anarchist society would inevitably fail because the rich will
always be able to buy property and power? Explain Shevek`s diagnosis o f what
went wrong with Tirin in the paragraph beginning, "Well, this." What do you
think of Takver`s arguments about the relationship between pregnancy and ethics?
They recall distinctly a similar argument made by one of Shevek`s childhood
friends in Chapter 2. Explain this statement: "That the Odonian society on
Anarres had fallen short of the ideal did not, in his eyes, lessen his
responsibility to it; just the contrary" (hint: the explanation is in the
following lines).
Chapter 11
Note that Shevek notices that Ambassador Keng has a hairless face and that
he feels hairy next to her. His reaction to her features as being childlike and
rounded suggests that the Urrasti and Anarresti have more angular features. What
does the Earth ambassador`s reaction to Urras tell us about conditions on Earth?
What does it mean that she thinks Urras is Paradise while Shevek thinks it is
Hell? Note how carefully LeGuin has avoided a bipolar value system in throughout
this novel, creating a spectrum of social arrangements with none perfectly good
or perfectly evil.
Chapter 12
This chapter is set just before the events of Chapter 1, bringing us full
circle. Analyze the argument against parliamentary procedures given in the third
paragraph. This preference for process over results stems directly from
anti-hierarchical strains in sixties political movements. Note how Rulag is
reintroduced into the story with no reference to the fact that she was Shevek`s
mother. Why? What role does she play here? "No vote was taken, as usual." What
grounds might anarchists have for arguing against voting? What do you think of
Odo`s message on deserving as quoted by Trepil? The essence of the anarchist
ideal lies in the speech of Bedap in the paragraph "Of course not." What does it
tell us about how an anarchist society can exist? It is revealed in the final
lines that Shevek had not intended at first to go to Urras. Throughout the novel
he has been backed by circumstances and experiences from one position to
another, often in directions he had not intended to go. This makes him
strikingly different from the classic enterprising SF hero who always knows
exactly what he wants and goes right after it.
Chapter 13
Note the recurrence of the wall image in this chapter. Why do you think
LeGuin chose to end the novel in the fashion she does? What advantages are there
in not resolving everything?
Notes by Paul Brians, Department of
English, Washington State University, Pullman
Version of March 2, 1995.
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