Chapter 1 Introduction Part 2 Open-ended Utopian Politics Chapter 3 The Dynamic and Revolutionary Utopia of Ursula K. Le Guin Chapter 4 Worlds Apart: Ursula K. Le Guin and the Possibility of Method Part 5 Post-Consumerist Politics Chapter 6 The Dispossessed as Ecological Political Theory Chapter 7 Ursula K. Le Guin, Herbert Marcuse, and the Fate of Utopia in the Postmodern Chapter 8 The Alien Comes Home: Getting Past the Twin Planets of Possession and Austerity in Le Guin's The Dispossessed Part 9 Anarchist Politics Chapter 10 Individual and Community in Le Guin's The Dispossessed Chapter 11 The Need for Walls: Privacy, Community, and Freedom in The Dispossessed Chapter 12 Breaching Invisible Walls: Individual Anarchy in The Dispossessed Part 13 Temporal Politics Chapter 14 Time and the Measure of the Political Animal Chapter 15 Fulfillment as a Function of Time, or the Ambiguous Process of Utopia Chapter 16 Science and Politics in The Dispossessed: Le Guin and the "Science Wars" Part 17 Revolutionary Politics Chapter 18 The Gap in the Wall: Partnership, Physics, and Politics in The Dispossessed Chapter 19 From Ambiguity to Self-Reflexivity: Revolutionizing Fantasy Space Chapter 20 Future Conditional or Future Perfect? The Dispossessed and Permanent Revolution Part 21 Open-ended Utopian Politics Chapter 22 Ambiguous Choices: Skepticism as a Grounding for Utopia Chapter 23 Empty Hands: Communication, Pluralism and Community in Ursula K. Le Guin's The Dispossessed Part 24 A Response, by Ansible, from Tau Ceti Part 25 Further Reading
Laurence Davis holds a doctoral degree in politics from Oxford University, and has taught political theory at Oxford University and University College Dublin. Peter Stillman is Professor of Political Science and Director of the Environmental Studies Program at Vassar College.
Ursula K. Le Guin’s The Dispossessed is one of the most significant
utopian novels in this long tradition of imaginative
socio-political thought experiments. In this collection, Davis and
Stillman have given us a “sustained and comprehensive”
re-examination of this “ambiguous utopia” by way of sixteen astute
and original essays. This is a welcome, timely, and important
collection.
*Tom Moylan, Glucksman Professor of Contemporary Writing and
Director, Ralahine Centre for Utopian Studies, University of
Limerick and author of Scraps of the Untainted Sky: Science
Fiction, Utopia, Dystopia and Demand the Impossible: Science
Fiction and the*
Like Le Guin's open-ended ambiguous utopia, these sixteen essays
will reveal their resonance only as we reread them. Together they
comprise a rich, and a valuable, and a persistently stimulating
fresh contribution to the ongoing and open-ended appreciation of
The Dispossessed.
*James Bittner, Author of Approaches to the Fiction of Ursula K. Le
Guin*
For three decades Le Guin's The Dispossessed has inspired debates
about competing ideologies, about notions of gender, about
space-time continuums, about forms of utopian expression-indeed
about topics as broad as human communication and as intensely
personal as the emotional epiphanies of the novel's hero Shevek.
So, to say that this lively first collection of essays about the
book is welcome and long overdue is to make a grand understatement.
Like Le Guin's novel the collection is wide-ranging, open-ended,
and provocative. It offers analyses of expected topics and
images—anarchism, ecology, and walls, for instance— from multiple
viewpoints, as well as discussions of important less-expected
issues, notably consumerism. Contributors examine rich networks of
connections and parallels between Le Guin's thought and art and the
works of Lao Tzu, Kropotkin, Paul Goodman, Marcuse, Hegel, Hannah
Arendt, and French and Italian architects and designers. Le Guin's
essay, which concludes the collection, is afrank and feisty
response to critics who reduce her novel to treatise status, and a
complex advocacy of art that teaches. This fine collection will
invigorate discussion of The Dispossessed and of Le Guin's other
works, especially Always Coming
*Kenneth M. Roemer, Author of The Obsolete Necessity, Build Your
Own Utopia, America as Utopia, and Utopian Audiences*
I was delighted to find that these essays deepened and expanded my
appreciation of both work and author. If you've read The
Dispossessed . . . by all means read this as well.
*Sfrevu*
Those interested in the history of both utopian and anarchist
thought will gain a great deal from the sophisticated analyses on
offer. This is particularly so given the diversity of the
perspectives brought to bear on the novel....What the volume offers
is an exceptional range of essays exploring the radical political
theory of the The Dispossessed.
*Political Studies Review*
For three decades Le Guin's The Dispossessed has inspired debates
about competing ideologies, about notions of gender, about
space-time continuums, about forms of utopian expression-indeed
about topics as broad as human communication and as intensely
personal as the emotional epiphanies of the novel's hero Shevek.
So, to say that this lively first collection of essays about the
book is welcome and long overdue is to make a grand understatement.
Like Le Guin's novel the collection is wide-ranging, open-ended,
and provocative. It offers analyses of expected topics and
images—anarchism, ecology, and walls, for instance— from multiple
viewpoints, as well as discussions of important less-expected
issues, notably consumerism. Contributors examine rich networks of
connections and parallels between Le Guin's thought and art and the
works of Lao Tzu, Kropotkin, Paul Goodman, Marcuse, Hegel, Hannah
Arendt, and French and Italian architects and designers. Le Guin's
essay, which concludes the collection, is a frank and feisty
response to critics who reduce her novel to treatise status, and a
complex advocacy of art that teaches. This fine collection will
invigorate discussion of The Dispossessed and of Le Guin's other
works, especially Always Coming Home, and engage any serious reader
of utopian and science fiction and political and social theory.
*Kenneth M. Roemer, Author of The Obsolete Necessity,
Build Your Own Utopia, America as Utopia, and
Utopian Audiences*
This collection will be an essential part of the collection of
every Le Guin scholar and every research library. It also has a
great deal to teach anyone interested in utopias or in the broader
issues of the political workings of fiction. Editors Davis and
Stillman are to be applauded for initiating this much-needed
reconsideration of a major work of utopian fiction and for bringing
together such a varies and astute group of contributors.
*Utopian Studies*
One would think that 324 pages on this one aspect of this one novel
by this one Le Guin might get a little thin; but I was happily
surprised.
*Paradoxa, November 2008*
Perhaps I can express my gratitude best by saying that reading
[these essays] left me knowing far better than I knew before how I
wrote the book and why I wrote it as I did…. They have restored the
book to me as I conceived it, not as an exposition of ideas but as
an embodiment of idea - a revolutionary artifact, a work containing
a potential permanent source of renewal of thought and perception,
like a William Morris design, or the Bernard Maybeck house I grew
up in…. This is criticism as I first knew it, serious, responsive,
and jargon-free. I honor it as an invaluable aid to reading, my own
text as well as others.
*Ursula K. Le Guin*
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