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@matematico314@social.linux.pizza
2025-11-19 03:13:31

Passei em uma livraria e me deparei com não apenas um, mas quatro livros da Ursula K. Le Guin que eu não tinha. Eu jš havia prometido a mim mesmo que não compraria mais livros enquanto não diminuísse a minha lista de livros comprados e não lidos, mas claro que eu não resisti e trouxe dois deles. E, ao sair, ainda disse para os dois que ficaram "um dia o Papai volta para buscar vocês". 😬

@matematico314@social.linux.pizza
2025-11-19 17:42:24

Sabe aquela minha promessa de só comprar livros novos após diminuir pelo menos um pouco a minha gigantesca pilha de livros comprados e ainda não lidos? Pois é, vai virar promessa para o ano de 2026 rs.

Uma foto de dois livros colocados lado a lado contra um fundo vermelho (que é um saco da Livraria da Travessa).  Ambos os livros são da "Ursula K. Le Guin" e tem como títulos "O Planeta Exílio" e "O Mundo de Rocannon".

Fornecido por @altbot, gerado localmente e de forma privada usando Gemma3:27b (e posteriormente pesadamente editado pelo autor do toot porque desta vez a IA errou bem mais do que a média).

🌱 Energia utilizada: 0.101 Wh
@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-11-12 01:35:46

Just finished "The Word for World is Forest" by Ursula K. Le Guin. Can't believe I didn't read this one earlier, and this strengthens my resolve to finish off the rest of her stuff I have yet to read sooner. I think it benefits somewhat from having read it after "Four Ways to Forgiveness" which gives more of the Hainish context. Certainly none of the blurbs I had read about it did it any measure of justice, which is one reason I hadn't prioritized it. More than being about colonization, it's about a solution to the paradox of tolerance, and both the price and imperfections of that solution. As usual with Le Guin's science fiction, it's a rich companion to anarchist thought.
I think the typical objection to seeing it as an answer to the warlord question would be that it serendipitously positions the indigenous population with more power and a less ruthless opponent than in the imagined scenario, and it uses the League of Worlds as a sort of deus ex machina to foreclose further retribution. Ultimately that's why I think it's more about the paradox of tolerance than anything else, but I also think in regards to the warlord problem that we are too quick to underestimate just how numerous and enthusiastic the opponents of a warlord might be, and to overestimate the strength of technological weapons wielded by frail (and psychologically unarmored) humans.
In any case, Le Guin gives this book's alien humans yet another fascinatingly credible capability, and getting to see the introduction of ansible technology with all its implications is pretty cool too. Maybe not

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-11-28 23:49:06
Content warning: Discussion of rape in Le Guin's fiction

Just finished "Orsinian Tales" by Ursula K Le Guin. It's... good, but not nearly as anarchist as a lot of her other work. These are short fiction stories weaving mostly through a fictional Eastern European country during the cold war, although some stretch farther back into history.
As typical for Le Guin a bunch of male protagonists, and a few parts that might seem to excuse sexual assault, which I've always found an odd thing in Le Guin's work (the rape in "The Dispossessed" bothered me too; the lack of strong female characters in "A Wizard of Earthsea" also sticks out to me). On the other hand, I've read from an interview that she wrote "Earthsea" absolutely knowing her audience (teenage boys) and intentionally writing something that would sell, which speaks to true mastery of her craft (I think the opening of "The Word for World is Forest" demonstrates what an expert can do wielding an intimate understanding of pulp science fiction tropes with intent, for example).
In any case, she writes sublime similes and sparse characters who nevertheless seem to embody deep wisdom about the human condition. I feel that often enough just a few words or sentences in a story bear forth hefty wisdom while around them Le Guin constructs something like an austere painting in muted tones, full of rich details that one can easily miss.
#AmReading #ReadingNow

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-09-25 09:51:34

In any case, day 2: Ursula K Le Guin.
As I've said elsewhere, part of her science fiction thesis is that "human" can encompass much more than what we mere Terrans think of it as, and that moral standing extends broadly throughout the universe. This is the antithesis of Tokens fantasy, wherein "race" is real and determines moral standing. For Le Guin, it's barely okay to intervene in complex alien politics unless you carefully ensure you're not causing systemic harms; for Tolkien, it's okay to ambush and murder orc children, because they are by nature evil.
Add to her excellent politics Le Guin's masterful worldbuilding and unparalleled range of plots, and you have the one author I loved as a decidedly liberal and naïve teen and love even more now that I'm an adult. She's an absolute legend and deserves a very high place on any list of women authors (or list of authors, period.).
For a short story, try "The Ones Who Walk Away From Omelas" which you can read here: utilitarianism.com/nu/omelas.p
For fantasy "A Wizard of Earthsea" (also has a nice graphic novel adaptation), or for science fiction, "The Left Hand of Darkness" or if you want a more anarchist flavor, "The Dispossessed."
I'll close this with an amazing quote from her:
"""
We live in capitalism. Its power seems inescapable. So did the divine right of kings. Any human power can be resisted and changed by human beings. Resistance and change often begin in art, and very often in our art, the art of words.
"""

@matematico314@social.linux.pizza
2025-12-04 16:21:37

Chegou a última parte dos meus presentes de Natal!
#bookstodon #ursulaKLeguin

"Contos de Terramar", de Ursula K. Le Guin. Uma edição em capa dura em um belíssimo tom de azul com letras douradas.
@matematico314@social.linux.pizza
2025-11-24 20:57:09

Chegaram os presentes de Natal que comprei pra mim. 😁

Dois livros estão lado a lado. O livro da esquerda tem uma capa vermelha escura com uma ilustração dourada de um animal de quatro patas que se assemelha a um leão. O texto dourado na capa diz “TEHANU”. Na parte inferior da capa está "ilustrações de charles vess", e no canto superior direito "URSULA K. LE GUIN".

O livro da direita tem uma capa azul escura com uma ilustração prateada de uma criatura serpentina enrolada em torno de uma estrutura semelhante a um navio. O texto prateado na capa diz…