The Dispossessed by Ursula Le Guin || Book review (some spoilers)

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  • Опубліковано 8 чер 2021
  • Hi everyone, today I’m going to be reviewing the sci-fi classic, The Dispossessed: an ambiguous utopia, by Ursula Le Guin.
    #thedispossessed #ursulaleguin #sciencefiction
    Review criteria
    ***** - blew my mind. Simple as.
    **** - great story, well written, entertained me all the way.
    *** - good story, well written, mostly entertaining.
    ** - has good bones but failed in a number of ways.
    * - failed in every way a book can.
    Images from a special edition of The Dispossessed printed by The Folio Society. bit.ly/3w7loHC
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    MY STUFF
    linktr.ee/bookodyssey​​​​​​
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    vvv MORE vvv
    MY SCI-FI NOVELS
    linktr.ee/bookodyssey​​​​​
    DELPHINE DESCENDS
    After her family is killed and her homeworld occupied, young Kathreen Martin is sent to the distant world of Furoris for re-education. She will live the rest of her life as a serf - to be bought and sold as a commodity of the Imperial Network.
    When her only chance of escape is ruined, a chance mistaken identity offers her a new life as the orphaned daughter of a First-Citizen Senator and heiress to a vast fortune.
    She vows to claw her way into power to sit among the worlds’ elite. Then, with her own hands, she will reap bloody vengeance on them all.
    But to beat them, she must play their game. And she must play it better than them all.
    BLACK MILK
    Prometheus has the chance to bring his wife back from the dead, but doing so will mean the destruction of Earth.
    Spanning time, planets and dimensions, Black Milk draws to a climactic point in a post-apocalyptic future, where humanity, stranded with no planet to call home, fights to survive against a post-human digital entity that pursues them through the depths of space.
    Five lives separated by aeons are inextricably linked by Prometheus’s actions:
    Ystil.3 is an AI unit sent back in time from the distant future to investigate Prometheus’s discovery...
    The mysterious Lydia has devoted her life to finding a planet that the last remaining humans can call home…
    Tom Jones (he’s a HUGE fan!) is an AI trapped inside a digital subspace, lost and desperate to find his way back to his beloved in real-time…
    Dr Norma Stanwyck is a neuroscientist from 24th Century Earth whose personal choices ripple throughout time...
    Prometheus must learn the necessity of death or the entire universe will be swallowed by his grief.
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    GOODREADS
    You can stalk me on Goodreads to see what I'm currently reading. / show. .
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  • Розваги

КОМЕНТАРІ • 39

  • @samwight
    @samwight Рік тому +17

    As someone who's read a truckload of theory, Le Guin truly understands how capitalism and anarchism works. This is one of the best depictions of it I've ever seen in a book. There are little hints and easter eggs throughout the book to other books of theory like Marx's Capital, Kropotkin's A Conquest for Bread, and more. She's sorta being like "Hahah yep, I had to struggle through that too, I understand what I'm doing :)"
    Le Guin's depiction of capitalism is not flawed, it's capitalism with the gloves off. What Le Guin presents is exactly what capitalism given enough time, what we have centuries of evidence and theory and research showing it does. And she presents this masterfully, following the theory and what we've seen in history, and presenting it in a way that feels realistically flawed but also just perfect.

    • @ongemakkelijkegladjakker
      @ongemakkelijkegladjakker 2 місяці тому

      Agreed. The reviewer is trying way too hard to take the political sting out of the book. LeGuin was an outspoken leftist and although the book is truly nuanced in its portrayal of these hypothetical societies its politicw definitely slanted to the left. Which greatly works to its benefit imo, both as a story and as a vehicle for communicating why resisting capitalism is necessary.

  • @gabriellachaviva
    @gabriellachaviva 2 роки тому +23

    Just finished this book today. The conversation between Shevek and the Terran ambassador Keng at the end made me tear up. Nuts how this was written nearly 40 years ago and still feels as relevant, maybe even moreso, today.

    • @martinstent5339
      @martinstent5339 2 роки тому +3

      Me too! When keng asks herself what kind of society could make such a personality, she is putting the whole thing in plain sight! That the society makes the man and not the other way around. I always get chocked up at that point too.

    • @teodoras9611
      @teodoras9611 Рік тому +1

      I finished the book yesterday. This scene followed a beautiful sunset scene on Anares, that I read whilst watching a sunset from an astronomical observatory in a sea of mountains on... our Earth. Then I went inside and read till I finished the book. The scene with the Terran ambassador made me sob. It was one of the three times I cried during this book.
      The other two-
      During Shevek's speech about suffering and the revolution was one of them.
      The other was at the beginning of Shevek and Takver's love story when they discussed love, wholeness and connection.
      All of these themes are mightily different. But I feel understood on every level, as if everything I ever thought meaningful and felt close to heart in this book is held in one place. As if someone else KNOWS and sees it all.
      And when I see people love the book as much it makes me happy, to know that.

  • @SciFiFantasyReadAlong
    @SciFiFantasyReadAlong 3 роки тому +15

    Ursula K. Le Guin is getting a postage stamp here in the US, just a few days from now

  • @andreasxanthros5853
    @andreasxanthros5853 3 роки тому +17

    This book remains my favourite Le Guin novel. I first read it way back when I was 16. I became aware of it while taking a course on the Theory of Revolution which was pretty unusual for secondary school. Of course, this prompted me to read everything by her I could find! Good choice for a review, Darrel, it helps keep her spirit alive.

    • @netwicks1126
      @netwicks1126 5 місяців тому

      I read it this year at age 17, it has become one of my favorite novels of all time. I may like it more than dune which has been my all time favorite book for the past like 2 years lol

  • @xavierseventeen1110
    @xavierseventeen1110 2 роки тому +6

    I finished the book recently and wanted to wallow in the feelings and impressions the experience gave me a bit more. Thanks for allowing us to linger. Very good review ^_^

  • @snovid3306
    @snovid3306 3 роки тому +11

    Awesome book, must-read for all, and, a thorough review, as always. You're a fresh breeze on BookTube, I wish you success. 👍🏾

  • @jemayeljuma2534
    @jemayeljuma2534 2 роки тому +4

    Thank you for this review. I found this book amazing, the most intelligent (and therefore best) sci-fi book I have ever read. I recommend it to all sci-fi fans

  • @unstopitable
    @unstopitable Рік тому +3

    I would very much like to hear someone do a comparison between this novel, The Left Hand of Darkness, and The Lathe of Heaven. She was one of the Greats.

  • @DaBlackRose
    @DaBlackRose 2 роки тому +4

    Where the heck do you get these photos? They go so well with your explanations. Also like your content.

  • @catalinb8446
    @catalinb8446 3 роки тому +1

    Great SF book ! Must read book for sure ! I loved it!

  • @peterconway6584
    @peterconway6584 3 роки тому +5

    It's been a long time since I read "The Dispossessed." What stands out in my memory is the way that Shevek's society barely supported his quest for discovery, and in fact its collectivist set-up often hindered him.

    • @tomitiustritus6672
      @tomitiustritus6672 2 роки тому +5

      I think one of the great themes is the reflection upon the collectivist:individualist dichotomy. Is it really a false dichotomy? Do we need to reconcile both concepts in each other in order for any of them to make sense? What good is a collective thats not made out of individuals and what use is being an individual without being part of a collective? The "freedom from" without the "freedom to" is just as unfree as the "freedom to" without the "freedom from". They can only be found in each other.

    • @andrewtalbott2539
      @andrewtalbott2539 2 роки тому +2

      @@tomitiustritus6672 That's an incredible point. I reread your comment several times and am beginning to understand it. You've just created an entirely new, intensely interesting discourse for me to work through in my head. Thank you.

  • @davidunderwood326
    @davidunderwood326 3 роки тому +2

    I bought and read The Left Hand of Darkness after it was featured in one of your videos. You may be influencing me again! Nice t-shirt btw

  • @Boggart85
    @Boggart85 3 роки тому +1

    Read the book a few years ago and very much liked to concepts but didn't finish as I couldn't get into the writing style. It only later dawned on me that as I was reading a translation, I should pick it up again in the original English.

  • @shevekanarres2926
    @shevekanarres2926 2 роки тому +2

    Good review

  • @tishardnatthaniel8047
    @tishardnatthaniel8047 3 роки тому +3

    Great video man

  • @martinstent5339
    @martinstent5339 2 роки тому +2

    Would anyone else here like to buy a copy of Odo's "Analogy" or "Prison Letters"? I don't have one of course, but I would love for someone to write them!

  • @s.ekin.
    @s.ekin. 2 роки тому

    Which Ursula book would you recommend to read after this one? Does her other book give the same taste?
    By the way your voice is relaxing.

    • @Sci-FiOdyssey
      @Sci-FiOdyssey  2 роки тому +1

      Thanks! If you haven’t read either the Left Hand of Darkness or the Lathe of Heaven I’d pick these up next… and probably in that order 😊

    • @s.ekin.
      @s.ekin. 2 роки тому

      @@Sci-FiOdyssey Thank you so much, i appreciate your help. ♡

  • @wasfuerkeksigkeit
    @wasfuerkeksigkeit 3 роки тому +1

    Oh my fucking god this channel is like made for me

  • @stevespain6445
    @stevespain6445 3 роки тому +1

    A great novel including as an introduction to what problems an anarchic society might face? I love how she set the anarchists on a resource poor moon. I have always taken the left leaning "bias" claims as just the strengths of anarchism.

    • @tomitiustritus6672
      @tomitiustritus6672 2 роки тому +5

      You could say people try to blame a left wing author of writing a book with a left wing perspective. Everybody writes a book from their perspective in some way. Thats the thing about being a human. Every "unpolitical" author writes out of their own ideology. LeGuin is just aware of it and reflects critically upon it on the page.
      Its not her fault that a anachist philosophy, no matter how you think of its practicality, is pretty compelling if communicated in a way that the addressant understands. I rarely met someone who would discard it by saying: "Oh god, that sounds horrible." Its almost always:"That sounds really nice, but i don't believe it would work." And thats something i've never, or very rarely, encountered in conversations about any other ideology. Most people seem to be on the page that it "should" work, but disagree on if it "would" work.

    • @stevespain6445
      @stevespain6445 2 роки тому +1

      @@tomitiustritus6672 Well said. I too hear a lot of people say "It sounds nice, but it could never work." And then I point out the numerous times it did work, and then it becomes something along the lines of "It would never work in this situation, now."

  • @psikeyhackr6914
    @psikeyhackr6914 3 роки тому +2

    I read The Dispossessed for the first time back in the 70s. Maybe 2 or 3 times since then. I found her depiction of Capitalism stereotypical and anecdotal. An interesting story to compare The Dispossessed to is Voyage from Yesteryear (1982) by James P Hogan.
    LeGuin is a better writer than Hogan but her book came out just before microcomputers hit the scene and Hogan worked for Digital Equipment Corporation, DEC. Hogan had a clearer vision of possible futures that most people still don't have.
    An even more recent study is Daemon & Freedom by Daniel Suarez.
    But in this capitalist, communist, left, right, BS do you ever notice that no one advocates that 700 year old double-entry accounting be mandatory in the schools? Do you suppose our smartphones can't handle it? They are more powerful than 1970s mainframes. LOL

  • @martinstent5339
    @martinstent5339 2 роки тому +8

    Please please, go back through the video and replace every mention of communism with anarchism. There is a world of difference between the 2. One could almost say that communism is anti-anarchism. The correct term for the kind of society pictured on Annares is a federated anarcho-syndicalism. Or anarchism for short.

    • @teodoras9611
      @teodoras9611 Рік тому +3

      Hm, yes, this was the only thing that bugged me in the video, good to note^^

  • @gemmel3197
    @gemmel3197 3 роки тому

    Mate like your content but your doing something wrong. Very few people watch vids till the end where you have you like and subscribe message. Move it to the middle, you will notice an improvement. Cheers.

  • @Sir-Cyr_Rill-Nil-Mill
    @Sir-Cyr_Rill-Nil-Mill Рік тому

    gwin not gooin. & I'm over 50 years old. Embarrassed!