"The Shobies' Story" | |
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Author | Ursula K. Le Guin |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Series | Hainish Cycle |
Genre(s) | Science Fiction |
Published in | A Fisherman of the Inland Sea |
Publication type | Anthology |
Publisher | Harper Prism |
Media type | Hardback |
Publication date | 1994 |
The Shobies' Story is a 1990 science fiction novella by American writer Ursula K. Le Guin, describing a society in which consensus matters more than individual viewpoints. The Shobies' Story posits a reality that emerges as the sum of what all the participants say: a meta-narrative, a democratically constructed myth. Le Guin tells us that the observer is part of the reality she's trying to describe. Every observer sees things differently, and the melding of those interpretations becomes the world.
The Shobies' Story" was nominated for a Nebula Award in the novelette category in 1991.[1]
Contents |
In The Shobies' Story, a starship crew faces the physical and psychic effects of traveling faster that light from Hain, the Prime World, the source of the oldest culture and most intelligent life among the planetary group called the Ekumen. Their entire journey involving time-travel lasts only forty-four minutes.
The Crew calls themselves the Shobies after their ship's name, "Shoby". The crews' ritual is gathering around a campfire to discuss the Churten theory and to tell stories that will bond them together. Gveter, the only Cetian in the crew, is much hairier than and not as gifted in language as the others, and he holds close to his knowledge. As a space crew, they had operated by consensual decision using transilience rather than by chain of command. Transilience is the experience of entering the fiction world by way of the imagination. Their equipment that facilitates transilience stops functioning and they can't agree on what they perceive. They start to lose their social cohesion and in order for the Shobies to tell their story, they must establish themselves with relation to time.
The Shobies' Story can be classified as a realistic story in the sense that anyone can place themselves in the story or the events that take place. The short story can correlate to real life by the family values of the characters. Le Guin also shows cultures coming together to work and live in overcoming the struggles the crew faces. There is also a realistic way Le Guin lets one see how the characters perceive others and their events. In the real world people perceive events differently and believe it to be true as others perceive the same events differently and also believe them to be true.
The Shobies' Story has a few themes in the story such as interstellar travel, Time dilation, cultural issues, and perceptions of reality. The Shobies' Story is based on a crew of ten people traveling to test an experiment that transilence may be an element or agent of transilence.[2] Culture is a factor since the crew memberts originate from different planets. Tai, Betton, and Shan are from Terra, Gveter is from Anarres and some of the crew are Hainish-chiffewarian [3] There is a cultural dominance in the sense that each one believes they know what is best for the crew members aboard the ship. Another theme of the story deals with time dilation and how long the trip will take and when or if the Shoby ship will return to the Ve in four to six hundred years. The story mostly deals with perception or how the characters take in the events that occur. Each event has different meaning to different characters like Oreth a child seeing a brown planet and Asten another child not seeing the brown planet and saying that there isn’t anything [4]
Asten: Six years old.
Betton: Son of Tai. From Terra. Eleven years old.
Gveter: He has more recent information and presumably a better understanding about their mission than the others, but it has to be pried out of him. Only twenty-five, the only Cetian in the crew, much hairier then the others, and not gifted in language, he spends a lot of time on the defensive. He often lectures the others about their propertarian habits; but he clings steadfastly to his knowledge, because he needs the advantage it gives him. For a while he speaks only in negatives and outdebates the others using his knowledge of certain physico-philosophico-techo-matter. He is from Annares and has an notable accent. Gveter has a mane on his head, a pelt on his limbs and body, fuzz on his feet and a silvery nimbus on his hands and face.
Karth: Karth is Gethenian. He has two children with Oreth, Asten and Rig.
Oreth: Oreth is also Gethenian. Risk taker. Has two children with Karth. He left Terra when he was eighteen.
Rig: Four years old.
Shan: Offers Betton fatherly-brotherly warmth, but he sought no formal crew relation with him or anyone. Also from Terra. He is dark in appearance and an elegant dancer.
Sweet Today: Sweet Today's physical description can be described as a big, tall, heavy woman in her late fifties. Her tone of voice can be described as slow and comfortable. She asked to be Grandmother to Rig, Asten, and Betton, and was accepted.
Tai: Parent of Betton. From Terra. Does not like to be touched.
Terran Lidi: The only Shoby older than Sweet Today, who was seventy-two earth years old and not interested in grandmothering. Lidi had been navigating for fifty years, and there is nothing she doesn't know about NAFAL (nearly as fast as light) ships, although occasionally she forgets that their ship is the Shoby and calls it the Soso or the Alterra.
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