In Left Hand of Darkness, Ursula LeGuin presents a world far different from the ones readers are familiar with on Earth. Gethen is ironic in that it eradicates the types of gender binaries that constrain human identity, life, behavior, and social ins Continue Reading...
Therefore, the investigator unwittingly admits that the Gethenian ambisexuality can create egalitarianism. The investigator also admits that some aspects of Gethenian socialization might be psychologically beneficial, such as the lack of Freudian-li Continue Reading...
Left Hand of Darkness, by Ursula Le Guin. Specifically, it will look at the book with a critical feminist approach. The Gethenian society seems perfect at first, but the lack of warmth in this cold world is a sad statement about relationships, and t Continue Reading...
But it was from the difference between us, not from the affinities and likenesses, but from the difference, that love came: and it was itself the bridge, the only bridge, across what divided us" (Le Guin).
The "love" referred to in this quotation t Continue Reading...
Masculinism in Science Fiction
Science fiction has always been a masculine genre, no matter that Mary Shelley invented it in her novel Frankenstein. Until fairly recent times, most science fiction writers were men, and they dealt with subjects like Continue Reading...