
Featured on October 13, 2007
Ursula K. Le Guin's website
www.ursulakleguin.com.
Introduction by Marianne Klekacz
"Tonight’s guest, Ursula K. Le Guin, is an icon of American
literature. This isn’t just my opinion: In 2000, Ursula was awarded
“Living Legend” status by the Library of Congress.
Since you’re here tonight, I’m assuming you read the pre-event
publicity. If I were to use this time enumerating Ursula’s publications
and awards, there would be no time left for her to read, and that would
be a great loss to all of us. So instead, I’d like to try to put a
little perspective around her body of work.
Had Ursula been writing in a different time, her audience might have
been completely different. In the 1950s, fiction of the genres we now
call fantasy or science fiction were generally relegated to magazines
with names like Amazing Stories or Astounding. Science
fiction in particular was generally read by boys and young men that we
would now call geeks or nerds. But some things happened that changed all
of that, at least in the United States.
In 1957, the Soviet Union launched Sputnik. Sputnik might have been just
a “beeping soccer ball” (as it has been described), but it raised a
little thrill of fear that the U.S. was falling behind in the technology
race. When JFK was elected President in 1960, one of his first major
program announcements was his determination to put a man on the moon by
the end of the decade. Suddenly space exploration and other worlds were
in the forefront of the public’s imagination, opening the door of
mainstream literary status to writers like Arthur C. Clarke, Isaac
Asimov, Ray Bradbury, and, of course, Ursula K. Le Guin.
Ursula began publishing in the early 1960s. There are two major awards
in the science-fiction/fantasy genres. Each year, the Hugo is awarded to
the book that readers select as the best; the Nebula is awarded to the
book selected as best by writers in the genres. Seldom are both awards
won by the same book.
It happened for the first time in 1965 when Frank Herbert’s Dune
won both. The next two times it happened, the books selected were by
Ursula K. Le Guin: The Left Hand of Darkness in 1969
(coincidentally the year that the U.S. actually did land men on the
moon), and The Dispossessed in 1974.
It seems to me that Ursula’s books represent what is most
thought-provoking and worthwhile in imaginative fiction. They force us
to explore what it really means to be human. She has earned her own
lecture in The Teaching Company course “Masterpieces of the Imaginative
Mind: Literature’s Most Fantastic Works.” Here is how Professor Eric
Rabkin summarizes her work:
“Le Guin induces us to adopt changes of viewpoint, shaping an
aesthetic experience that can change our attitudes toward language,
gender, human relations, and personal morality.”
It seems to me that this might be the most important function of
literature across the ages.
Please join me in welcoming Ursula K. Le Guin."
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