Posts Tagged ‘Ursula K. le Guin’

Ursula Le Guin vs. Google

Monday, January 25th, 2010

Now that Google has declared war on China, can it take on a diminutive 80-year-old science-fiction and fantasy author? Probably, but Ursula K. Le Guin is not going down without a fight. It all started when the formidable author of the classic Earthsea novels and, most recently, the Virgil-inspired Lavinia, resigned her long membership in the Authors Guild over the group’s support of the Google settlement on copyrighted material; that letter here. Le Guin is also trying to enlist as many writers as she can to oppose what she calls the Google Putsch.

Will The Google Settlement Leave Ursula Le Guin Dispossessed?” by Scott Timberg, io9 1-25-09

The Google Putsch!

May it fail like its namesake.

From the 18th, Here’s Le Guin and Margaret Killjoy.

The whole thing’s inspiring and worth a view (Le Guin reads from The Dispossessed and Always Coming Home, Killjoy presents re: anarchist fiction, they both answer questions) but at around 57 min., Le Guin pitches her petition and talks copyright briefly.

Can’t say I’m surprised by any of it – Google’s been one of the most wretched boils on the arse of the infoscape for, what, over eleven years now?  Anyhow, for whatever good it all does, the Laboratorium remains on top of it.

Unfuck Google, have fun and cuídate.

UPDATE, 2-5-10

Odd couple?  Webster Tarpley schools this RT talking head (though props, once again, to RT for even going there in the first place) on Spookle’s sordid origins,

and Steve Watson sums the situation up nicely at Prison Planet.  We’ll see how the book settlement shit shakes out on the 18th.

Cheek by Jowl

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

Realistic fiction is relentlessly focused on human behavior and psychology.  “The proper study of mankind is Man.”  When fiction disobeys Pope and begins to include the Other, it begins to shade into the ghost story, the horror story, the animal story, or science fiction, or fantasy; it begins the movement outward to the not-entirely-human.  Even “regional” fiction, always looked at disparagingly by the modernists, is part of this movement, sliding from human psychology into that which contains it, the landscape.

We need better definitions of terms than the ones we have.  Hardy’s Egdon Heath is in itself entirely realistic, but its centrality to The Return of the Native decentralises the human characters in a way quite similar to that of fantasy and even science fiction.  Melville’s white whale isn’t a real whale, he’s a beast of the imagination, like dragons or unicorns; hence Moby Dick is not an animal story, but it is a fantasy.  Woolf’s Flush is an animal story, because Flush is (and actually was) a real spaniel; but of course it is also a novel about the Brownings; it is also definable as a fantasy, since the dog is a central character, and we know what he is thinking; but then we know what the dog is thinking in the hunting scene in War and Peace, too, which does not make War and Peace a fantasy… The clean, sharp definition of what realism is and what fantasy is recedes even further, along with any justification for despising genre.

I venture a non-defining statement: realistic fiction is drawn towards anthropocentrism, fantasy away from it.  Although the green country of fantasy seems to be entirely the invention of human imaginations, it verges on and partakes of actual realms in which humanity is not lord and master, is not central, is not even important.  In this, fantasy may come much closer to the immense overview of the exact sciences than does science fiction, which is very largely obsessed by a kind of imperialism of human knowledge and control, a colonial attitude towards the universe.

- from “The Critics, the Monsters, and the Fantasists”

Ursula Le Guin writes rad imaginative literature.  She also writes rad criticism of same, collected here.

5/5 stars

Sure, the author of the Earthsea books is all kinds of biased (so am I – I love imaginative lit more than any other art form); but such bias is, more than permissible, de rigueur for the matters to which Le Guin attends in Cheek by Jowl.    As C.S. Lewis wrote in “On Science Fiction”, “Let bad tragedies be censured by those who love tragedy, and bad detective stories by those who love the detective story.  Then we shall learn their real faults.  Otherwise we shall find epics blamed for not being novels, farces for not being high comedies, novels by James for lacking the swift action of Smollett.”  Here, Le Guin rails against such folly, criticizing individual stories in the context of form and genre, and as one who not only loves fantasy but groks the craft of it.

In the short “Assumptions about Fantasy”, she picks three biggies and inverts them.  “The Wilderness Within”, about the influence of early childhood reading on adult writing, the only one of these I’d encountered before, and the only one collected elsewhere (in 2004’s  The Wave in the Mind [also highly recommended]), I gladly revisited.  “Re-reading Peter Rabbit” deals with returning to stories that moved us in early childhood (never read Peter Rabbit, but it’s on my to-read list now, along with Bambi, Kim and Bakhtin).   “The Critics, the Monsters, and the Fantasists” again turns the tables on the modernist/realist and reductionist takes on fantasy, while exploring some common qualities of fantasy settings.  The title piece, subtitled “Animals in Children’s Literature”, based on a 2004 American Library Association lecture, is the longest, divided into eight sections, roughly following a spectrum from stories in which animals are central to those in which humans are.  She begins with those tales, mostly drawn from myth, in which animals are the sole protagonists, examines the paradoxes of animal speech, then what she calls animal biographies: Lassie Come-Home and The Incredible Journey (neither a full biography, “since they recount only one episode”), Red Heifer, Bambi, White Fang, Lad: A Dog, The Biography of a Grizzly, Gay-Neck, Black Beauty, Mrs. Chippy’s Last Expedition and Lost, Stolen or Strayed (of which I’ve read only White Fang, the most problematic for Le Guin).  Next come “animal novels”, which “differ from the biographies in containing a fantasy element: what the animals do is a mixture of behavior proper to their species and human behavior,” and which include Kipling’s “The White Seal” (and the other episodes of The Jungle Books not concerned with Mowgli), Charlotte’s Web, Mrs Frisby and the Rats of Nimh, Redwall, The Wind in the Willows, Watership Down, and Fire Bringer (of which I’ve read all but Nimh, Redwall, and Fire Bringer [of which Le Guin commends Nimh]). Near the middle of the spectrum fall Smokey, The Black Stallion, Misty of Chincoteague and National Velvet (horses, all), Gentle Ben, Old Yeller, Julie of the Wolves, Dr Dolittle, The Jungle Books as a whole, and The Sword in the Stone. At the human end are “fables and psychic fragments” “where the animal exists mixed with or as a reflection of the human”, including Aesop’s fables, the Grimms’ Household Tales, “animal satires” Animal Farm, The Story of Ferdinand and Part IV of Gulliver’s Travels, and Philip Pullman’s best-selling trilogy.  “The Young Adult in YA” deals with the rules, or lack thereof, of writing fiction for kids, of the origins of Earthsea and how kids still dig it despite, by the middle of the series, the protagonists having aged well beyond their teenage years.  In “A Message about Messages”, Le Guin echoes Twain and anyone else irked by the tendency to reduce a story to a slogan: “I’m not an answering machine,” she writes.  Straight up!  Finally, in “Why Kids Want Fantasy” she explains what kids and dragons know that “producers of fantasy-by-the-yard” do not.

Le Guin surprised me a few times in this collection.  She defends such oft-dismissed (as escapist, militaristic, misogynist, what have you) fantasies as those of Kipling and Tolkien, and takes some other giants to task: the fairy tales of Wilde and Andersen for lacking emotional honesty, only pretending to be for children, and for “disguising adult self-pity in sentimental cruelty”; Richard Adams for feigning to write of rabbits as they are, portraying them instead as he wishes to give men an excuse to be; Philip Pullman for cheating, changing the rules/essential nature of his daemons.

If you’ve not read Le Guin before, dig one of her novels before you hit up Cheek by Jowl, but by all means do hit it up.

All in all this is an excellent book to have on your reference shelf if you’re a reader, writer, a reviewer, a critic, or a teacher of children’s literature.

Review by Gayle Surrette, SFRevu 4-30-09

Or of any imaginative literature.

Happy reading and writing.

Mythmakers & Lawbreakers: Anarchist Writers on Fiction

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

I don’t think it’s any stretch of the imagination to say that not all of the authors I talked to would agree with each other about much more than the desire for an anarchist society, if that.  I’ve spoken with pacifists and insurrectionary anarchists, with anti-civilization authors and pro-technology ones.  But they’ve all got a lot to say about storytelling, a lot to say about society.  I’m glad to get them under one cover.

Mythmakers & Lawbreakers: Anarchist Writers on Fiction is a collection of interviews conducted and edited by Steampunk Magazine founder Margaret Killjoy (currently crashing out at the Cyberpunk Apocalypse), the coolest such collection I’ve read since Across the Wounded Galaxies.

Rating: 5/5 stars

I approached Mythmakers & Lawbreakers a big fan of Robinson, Moore, and Le Guin, and being somewhat familiar with CrimethInc., Jensen, Moorcock and Professor Calamity (who came to my attention for his G-20 Twittering arrest and against whom charges have recently been dropped).  As such, most of the interviewees were new voices to me, and my to-read list has correspondingly expanded (I’m particularly pumped to read one of Lewis Shiner’s novels; his short stuff, available here, is fantastic).  This collection often surprised me (pleasantly, as when Alan Moore spouted off about alternative currencies, unpleasantly, as when Starhawk self-identified as a progressive democrat and said, “Go Obama, we need more regulation…”), prompted me to scrutinize my own premises and goals regarding anarchy and literature (individually and, like, together) and for shizzle inspired me to kick my own fictional endeavors into high gear.

Killjoy also covers a lot of ground in his marvelous appendices (I was set to be all like, “WTF, why didn’t suchandsuch make the cut?” but I got nothin’), with a paragraph or so each about other self-proclaimed anarchist fiction writers (listed here), “Also Of Note” authors who’ve been “adopted” (Wilde, Tolkien, Shaw, Kafka, Joyce, Huxley, Jack London, Frank Herbert, Hugo Ball: What yinz stiffs gonna do about it?), and lists of “Stories that explore anarchist societies”, “Stories that fictionalize anarchist history”, “Stories that feature sympathetic anarchist characters”, and “Stories that feature anarchists as villains”.

These lists alone make Mythmakers & Lawbreakers praiseworthy, but as the interviews are all entertaining as hell, there’s really no reason not to pick it up (through the above link, presuming it’s out of stock at your local independent bookseller/infoshop) immediately… presuming you’re, you know, a real anarchist/SF geek and not just some joker.  Killjoy concludes,

And honestly, we just need stories with some damn teeth.

I’d add, echoing the interviewees, shiny ones.

Happy reading and writing and cuídate.

Rocannon’s World

Monday, February 16th, 2009

I just finished Ursula le Guin’s first published novel Rocannon’s World and it was delicious!  According to Encarta, le Guin wrote five unpublished novels before she sold RW to Ace, which I find rather encouraging.

Reading RW, I was reminded of George R.R. Martin’s first novel Dying of the Light, which I read a few months back.  Both stories get rolling when special jewels (personally important, in both cases, to the viewpoint characters rather than to any vast factions) change hands, and both share the premise of a planet-hopping wanderer from an advanced interstellar civilization plunked down in a backwater planet’s feudal, high fantasy-flavored milieu. The descriptions of mounted and craft-borne flight (“windsteeds” in le Guin’s novel, “aircars” in Martin’s) over haunting wildernesses, and even the vibe of the planets themselves felt similar to me in a way I apparently can’t articulate very well at the moment.

As he writes in this review, Orson Scott Card also felt compelled to visit Rocannon’s World recently (must be in the air).  You can hear him yak about the novel’s early impact on him and about its audiobook incarnation here.

Guess it’s not pronounced like “rockin’ on” after all…