Seeger, SA and Davison-Vecchione, Daniel (2021) Ursula Le Guin’s Speculative Anthropology: Thick Description, Historicity and Science Fiction. Theory, Culture and Society: explorations in critical social science, 40 (7-8). pp. 119-140. DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/02632764211051780
Seeger, SA and Davison-Vecchione, Daniel (2021) Ursula Le Guin’s Speculative Anthropology: Thick Description, Historicity and Science Fiction. Theory, Culture and Society: explorations in critical social science, 40 (7-8). pp. 119-140. DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/02632764211051780
Seeger, SA and Davison-Vecchione, Daniel (2021) Ursula Le Guin’s Speculative Anthropology: Thick Description, Historicity and Science Fiction. Theory, Culture and Society: explorations in critical social science, 40 (7-8). pp. 119-140. DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/02632764211051780
Abstract
This article argues that Ursula Le Guin’s science fiction is a form of ‘speculative anthropology’ that reconciles thick description and historicity. Like Clifford Geertz’s ethnographic writings, Le Guin’s science fiction utilises thick description to place the reader within unfamiliar social worlds rendered with extraordinary phenomenological fluency. At the same time, by incorporating social antagonisms, cultural contestation, and historical contingency, Le Guin never allows thick description to neutralise historicity. Rather, by combining the two and exploring their interplay, Le Guin establishes a critical relation between her imagined worlds and the reader’s own historical moment. This enables her to both counter Fredric Jameson’s influential criticism of her work – the charge of ‘world reduction’ – and point to ungrasped utopian possibilities within the present. Le Guin’s speculative anthropology thus combines the strengths while overcoming some of the limitations of both Geertz’s thick-descriptive method and Jameson’s theory of the science fiction genre.
Item Type: | Article |
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Uncontrolled Keywords: | anthropology; Clifford Geertz; Fredric Jameson; Ursula Le Guin; science fiction; thick description; utopia |
Divisions: | Faculty of Arts and Humanities Faculty of Arts and Humanities > Literature, Film, and Theatre Studies, Department of |
SWORD Depositor: | Unnamed user with email elements@essex.ac.uk |
Depositing User: | Unnamed user with email elements@essex.ac.uk |
Date Deposited: | 10 Nov 2021 16:19 |
Last Modified: | 05 Dec 2024 00:43 |
URI: | http://repository.essex.ac.uk/id/eprint/31436 |
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Licence: Creative Commons: Attribution 3.0