30 pages • 1 hour read
Ursula K. Le GuinA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
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What commentary does the text make on gender difference? On sexuality? How are the two intertwined? Compare Shevek’s Odinian perspective with the perspectives of Urrasti characters.
How do Urrasti views of superiority and inferiority shape their view of race? Of the differences between animals and persons? Shevek is shocked by many of these views. Choose one scene of his reaction to an Urrasti conceptand discuss the text’s critique of life on Urras.
Anarres is not by any means a utopia: it is bereft of resources, and according to some characters, is governed by stifling public opinion. Is there a critique of socialism and anarchism in this text? How complicit are the Urrasti in the poverty on Anarres, and how do Anarresti themselves perpetuate it?
Chapter Ten refers to Shevek as “he,” rather than by his proper name, and unfolds the story of his time in the dust mostly through dialogue with a truck driver. What effect does this have on narration? What does it imply about Shevek’s time in the dust?
Tirin’s play features an Urrasti on Anarres and is referred to throughout the text as a drama that scandalizes his society. How does this fictional Urrasti’s experience on Anarres compare with Shevek’s on Urras? Why does this play scandalize the Anarresti? Discuss the role of satire in Anarresti society.
Shevek is a staunch individualistand says that the only true freedom is in the human mind. But many of his revelations are nestled within dialogues: with Bedap, Takver, Keng, and others. Choose one scene of dialogue and discuss what it indicates about the individual will and its limits. What role does conversation play in expanding individual consciousness? Of attaining true freedom?
The novel frequently introduces the reader to Shevek’s thoughts on physics. What significance do the specifics of his theories have? What are the limits of Sequency theory? Of Simultaneity theory? Are these two theories metaphors for life on Urras and Anarres?
Shevek’s mother leaves him in a youth dormitory, and he has a contentious relationship with her when they meet in his adult life. By contrast, he and Takver remain close with their daughters. What commentary does the text make on the importance of childrearing? On the bonds between parents and children? On the responsibilities a society has to its next generation?
A Hanishman accompanies Shevek to Anarres. What is the significance of this character’s desire? What advice does Shevek give him? What does this advice reveal about the true nature of freedom?
By Ursula K. Le Guin