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The Dispossessed: An Ambiguous Utopia Ursula K. Le Guin

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Title: The Dispossessed: An Ambiguous Utopia Ursula K. Le Guin


1
The Dispossessed An Ambiguous UtopiaUrsula K.
Le Guin
  • "Those who build walls are their own prisoners.
    I'm going to go fulfill my proper function in the
    social organism. I'm going to go and unbuild
    walls."Shevek from Ursula Le Guin's The
    Dispossessed

2
You can go home again, the General Temporal
Theory asserts, so long as you understand that
home is a place where you have never been. p. 55
3
(No Transcript)
4
Literary honors and awards
  • 2004 Margaret A. Edwards Award for lifetime
    achievement (YALSA)
  • 2004 Arbuthnot Lecturer (American Library
    Association)
  • 2003 Grand Master, SFWA
  • 2003 Locus Readers Award "The Wild Girls"
  • 2003 Asimov's Readers Award "The Wild Girls"
  • 2003 Endeavor Award Tales from Earthsea
  • 2002 PEN/Malamud Award for Short Fiction
  • 2002 Willamette Writers Lifetime Achievement
    Award
  • 2002 Locus Readers Awards Tales from Earthsea,
    "The Bones of the Earth,"
  • 2002 Locus Readers Awards Tales from Earthsea,
    "The Finder"
  • 2001 Endeavor Award The Telling

5
  • 2001 Locus Readers Awards for The Telling and
    "The Birthday of the World."
  • 2001 Lifetime Achievement Award, Pacific NW
    Booksellers Assoc.
  • 2000 Robert Kirsch Lifetime Achievement Award,
    L.A. Times
  • 1998 Bumbershoot Arts Award, Seattle
    Introduction "Ursula K. Le Guin Mutinous
    Navigator," by Vonda N. McIntyre offsite link
  • 1997 James Tiptree Jr. Award for "Mountain Ways"
  • 1996 Locus Readers Award for Four Ways to
    Forgiveness
  • 1996 James Tiptree Jr. Retrospective Award for
    Left Hand of Darkness
  • 1996 Nebula Award for "Solitude"
  • 1995 Theodore Sturgeon Award for "Forgiveness
    Day"
  • 1995 Locus Readers Award for "Forgiveness Day"
  • 1995 James Tiptree, Jr, Award for "The Matter of
    Seggri"
  • 1995 Asimov's Readers Award for "Forgiveness Day"
  • 1995 Hubbub annual poetry award for "Semen"

6
  • 1992 H.L.Davis Fiction Award from OLA for Searoad
  • 1992 Searoad shortlisted for Pulitzer Prize
  • 1991 Harold Vursell Award, American Academy
    Institute of Arts Letters
  • 1991 Pushcart Prize for "Bill Weisler"
  • 1990 Nebula Award for Tehanu
  • 1988 Hugo Award for "Buffalo Gals"
  • 1988 International Fantasy Award for "Buffalo
    Gals"
  • 1987 Prix Lectures-Jeunesse for Very Far Away
    from Anywhere Else (tr. Laroche)
  • 1986 Janet Heidinger Kafka Prize for Fiction for
    Always Coming Home
  • 1985 Always Coming Home shortlisted for National
    Book Award
  • 1984 Locus Award for The Compass Rose
  • 1979 Gandalf Award (Grand Master of Fantasy)

7
  • 1979 Lewis Carroll Shelf Award for A Wizard of
    Earthsea
  • 1976 Jupiter Award for "The Diary of the Rose"
  • 1975 Nebula Award for The Dispossessed
  • 1975 Hugo Award for The Dispossessed
  • 1975 Nebula Award for "The Day Before the
    Revolution"
  • 1975 Jupiter Award for "The Day Before the
    Revolution"
  • 1974 Hugo Award for "The Ones Who Walk Away from
    Omelas"
  • 1973 Locus Award for The Lathe of Heaven
  • 1973 Hugo Award for The Word for World is Forest
  • 1972 National Book Award for Children's Books for
    The Farthest Shore
  • 1972 Newbery Silver Medal Award for The Tombs of
    Atuan
  • 1969 Hugo Award for The Left Hand of Darkness
  • 1969 Nebula Award for The Left Hand of Darkness
  • 1968 Boston Globe-Horn Book award for A Wizard of
    Earthsea

8
Understanding Anarchism in the Dispossessed
  • Anarchism, which grew out of French social
    philosophy of the eighteenth century,
  • Anarchists posit 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."
  • 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 of 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.
  • Keep free. Power inheres in a center. Youre
    going to the center. Mitis to Shevek p. 58

9
  • 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). In many ways,
    Annares is an idealized hippie commune.

10
Anarchism in Practice
  • Decentralization had been an essential element
    in Odo's plans for the society she did not live
    to see founded. She had no intention of trying to
    de-urbanize civilization. Though she suggested
    that the natural limit to the size of a community
    lay in its dependence on its own immediate region
    for essential food and power, she intended that
    all communities be connected by communication and
    transport networks, so that goods and ideas could
    get where they were wanted, and the
    administration of things might work with speed
    and ease and no community should be cut off from
    change and interchange. But the network was not
    to be run from the top down. There was to be no
    controlling centre, no capital, no establishment
    for the self-perpetuating machinery of
    bureaucracy and the dominance-drive of
    individuals seeking to become captains, bosses,
    chief's of state.

11
  • 'The Day before the Revolution' published in the
    anthology 'The Winds Twelve Quarters Vol2' It is
    written by Le Guin 'In Memorial to Paul Goodman
    1911-1972'. An excerpt.... "Odonianism is
    anarchism. Not the bomb-in-the-pocket stuff,
    which is terrorism, whatever name it tries to
    dignify itself with, not the social-Darwinist
    economic 'libertarianism' of the far right but
    anarchism, as prefigured in early Taoist thought,
    and expounded by Shelley and Kropotkin, Goldman
    and Goodman. Anarchism's principal target is the
    authoritarian State (capitalist or socialist)
    its principle moral-practical theme is
    cooperation (solidarity, mutual aid). It is the
    most idealistic, and to me the most interesting,
    of all political theories."

12
Is Anarchism Possible?
  • Weve let cooperation become obedience. Shevek
    to Bedap.

13
Environmental Protection and Peace
  • Ursula Le Guin, speaking about Vietnam in 1968,
    gives an insight into the writing of this story-
    The lies and hypocrisies redoubled, so did the
    killing. Moreover, it was becoming clear that the
    ethic which approved the defoliation of forests
    and grainlands and the murder of non-combatants
    in the name of 'peace' was only a corollary of
    the ethic which permits the despoliation of
    natural resources for private profit or the GNP,
    and the murder of the creatures of the Earth in
    the name of man.

14
Marx and Alienation in the Odonian World
  • "The less he had, the more absolute became his
    need to be. He recognized that need, in Odonian
    terms, as his 'cellular function,' the analogic
    term for the individual's individuality, the work
    he can do best, therefore his best contribution
    to his society. A healthy society would let him
    exercise that optimum function freely, in the
    coordination of all such functions finding its
    adaptability and strength... His sense of primary
    responsibility toward his work did not cut him
    off from his fellows, from his society, as he had
    thought. It engaged him with them absolutely."

15
Alienation
  • For Marx, the history of mankind had a double
    aspect It was a history of increasing control of
    man over nature at the same time as it was a
    history of the increasing alienation of man.
  • Alienation may be described as a condition in
    which men are dominated by forces of their own
    creation, which confront them as alien powers.

16
Alienation and Capitalism
  • To Marx, all major institutional spheres in
    capitalist society, such as religion, the state,
    and political economy, were marked by a condition
    of alienation.
  • Moreover, these various aspects of alienation
    were interdependent.
  • "Objectification is the practice of alienation.
    Just as man, so long as he is engrossed in
    religion, can only objectify his essence by an
    alien and fantastic being so under the sway of
    egoistic need, he can only affirm himself and
    produce objects in practice by subordinating his
    products and his own activity to the domination
    of an alien entity, and by attributing to them
    the significance of an alien entity, namely
    money."
  • Money as a fetish. It is through the medium of
    money that alienation is transmitted.

17
The Four Aspects of Alienation
  • The Object Produced
  • The Process of Production
  • Himself/Herself
  • The Community of Fellows

18
The Object Produced
  • 1) The Object produced- "The object produced by
    labor, its product, now stands opposed to it as
    an alien being, as a power independent of the
    producer. . . .The more the worker expends
    himself in work the more powerful becomes the
    world of objects which he creates in face of
    himself, the poorer he becomes in his inner life,
    and the less he belongs to himself.
  • The object produced is used to satisfy basic
    needs, but the worker lacks detailed knowledge
    and control over the product.

19
The Process of Production
  • 2) The process of production- "However,
    alienation appears not merely in the result but
    also in the process of production, within
    productive activity itself. . . . If the product
    of labor is alienation, production itself must be
    active alienation. . . . The alienation of the
    object of labor merely summarizes the alienation
    in the work activity itself.
  • Productive activity belongs to the capitalist,
    the process is no longer satisfying in and of
    itself. Instead it is tied into the generation
    of profit.

20
Himself/Herself- Species Being
  • 3) Him/herself- Being alienated from the objects
    of his labor and from the process of production,
    man is also alienated from himself--he cannot
    fully develop the many sides of his personality.
    "Work is external to the worker. . . . It is not
    part of his nature consequently he does not
    fulfill himself in his work but denies himself. .
    . . The worker therefore feels himself at home
    only during his leisure time, whereas at work he
    feels homeless."31 "In work the worker does not
    belong to himself but to another person."32 "This
    is the relationship of the worker to his own
    activity as something alien, not belonging to him
    activity as suffering (passivity), strength as
    powerlessness, creation as emasculation, the
    personal physical and mental energy of the
    worker, his personal life. . . . as an activity
    which is directed against himself, independent of
    him and not belonging to him.
  • One is alienated from his/her human potential.
    We become less human through our work and more
    like animals. (who only do things to satisfy
    basic needs).

21
Community of Fellows
  • 4) Community of Fellows- "Man is alienated from
    other men. When man confronts himself he also
    confronts other men. What is true of man's
    relationship to his work, to the product of his
    work and to himself, is also true of his
    relationship to other men. . . . Each man is
    alienated from others . . . each of the others is
    likewise alienated from human life.
  • Rather than working together, workers are pitted
    in competition against one another.

22
Emancipation- Praxis
  • Human emancipation only occurs when individuals
    become species beings, or realize their
    potential.
  • Praxis- concrete action informed by theory
  • His ideal society does not rule over people and
    is nothing beyond the concrete relations between
    individuals.

23
Marx on Human Potential
  • All that is solid melts into air, all that is
    holy is profaned, and man is at last compelled to
    face with sober senses, his real conditions of
    life and his relations with his kind. Marx 1848
  • Through change the realization of human potential
    may be realized.
  • Species beings- human potential as a group,
    less than an individual phenomenon.
  • Role of Capitalism- both positive and negative
    consequences

24
Getting Things Done
  • they were simply busy getting things done. It
    puzzled him. He had assumed that if you removed
    a human beings natural incentive to work-his
    initiative, his spontaneous creative energy- and
    replaced it with external motivation and
    coercion, he would become a lazy and careless
    worker The lure an compulsion of profit was
    evidently a much more effective replacement of
    the natural initiative than he had been led to
    believe. p. 82

25
Le Guin Offers a Critique
  • Are the real conditions of existence realized on
    Annares? In what ways is this story about Shevek
    coming to terms with these conditions?

26
According to Marx
  • In the ideal society, man "will fish in the
    morning, hunt in the afternoon, and write
    criticism in the evening, without for all that
    being a fisherman, hunter or critic".

27
  • Odo wrote
  • 'A child free from the guilt of ownership and the
    burden of economic competition will grow up with
    the will to do what needs doing and the capacity
    for joy in doing it. It is useless work that
    darkens the heart. The delight of the nursing
    mother, of the scholar, of the successful hunter,
    of the good cook, of the skilful maker, of anyone
    doing needed work and doing it well, - this
    durable joy is perhaps the deepest source of
    human affection and of sociality as a whole. From
    Ursula Le Guin's The Dispossessed, Page 207.

28
A Flawed Utopia
29
Commodities
  • Are products of labor intended for both use and
    exchange.
  • People produce what they need to survive.
  • Commodities are the reified result of labor.

30
The Fetishism of Commodities
  • Labor gives commodities their value. The
    fetishism of commodities involves the process by
    which actors fail to recognize that it is their
    labor that gives commodities their value.
  • A commodity is therefore a mysterious thing,
    simply because in it the social character of
    mens labor appears to them as an objective
    character stamped upon the product of that labor
    because the relations of the producers to the sum
    total of their own labor is presented to them as
    a social relation, existing not between
    themselves, but between the products of their
    labor. Marx, 1867

31
Value
  • Use value- objects produced for use by oneself or
    others in the immediate environment. With use
    value, objects are the products of human labor
    and cannot achieve an independent existence
    because they are controlled by the actors.
  • Exchange Value- the value of something in an
    exchange. The value something takes one when
    exchanged in an open market.
  • Surplus Value- the difference between what the
    worker is paid and what the worker produces

32
The Demands of Capital
  • Capital- the objectified embodiment of past labor
    (dead labor). Its value can only be brought to
    life when living labor is applied to it.
  • Capital is dead labour which, vampire like,
    lives only by sucking living labour, and lives
    the more, the more labour it sucks (Capital, p.
    342)
  • Capital requires ever increasing demands on the
    workers time (machines arent making money when
    they are down).
  • Human needs and hardships are secondary to the
    demands of capital to expand.
  • -shift to continuous production provides and
    example of this tendency.

33
  • Anarres
  • Propertarian State- Capitalism
  • Thu- Stalinist State
  • How do Benbili, Thu and A-io represent what is
    happening in the U.S., USSR and the countries
    caught in between?

34
Theory of Simultaneity
  • Note the alternating chapters, how does this
    relate to the theory of simultaneity?

35
Gender
  • Le Guin is critical of dominant views of gender
    in our own culture. (Shevek informs the
    propertarians of Urras that about half of
    scientists are women).
  • What is her critique?

36
Essential Human Nature
  • What is human nature?
  • Is Le Guin a social Constructionist?
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