Feminist Science-Fiction?Gender Aspects in Ursula K. Le Guin s The Dispossessed and Feminist Criticism (Paperback)

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Seminar paper from the year 2015 in the subject English Language and Literature Studies - Literature grade: 1 0 University of Bonn (Anglistik) course: Science-Fiction language: English abstract: In recent decades the literary genre of Science Fiction has experienced a rising interest which might be attributed to the rapid technological development and the deep integration of it into daily life. Science Fiction offers writers a wide range of potential themes to explore and is thus a very complex genre. While often being considered male oriented at least during the Feminist Movement in the 1960s female authors found their way into the genre and raised questions about gender roles political inequality and sexuality within their works. Among those female writers was Ursula K. Le Guin who gained wide recognition for her writing and is today regarded one of the most influential science-fiction and fantasy author of the twentieth century. Asscociated with feminist tendencies in her works her most famous novel referred to be feminist science fiction is The Left Hand of Darkness in which she imagined an androgynous society in order to investigate what society would be if sex did not matter. But also many other of her works have received attention from critics interested in gender and feminism. In this paper I intend to analyse and discuss the depiction of gender and the realisation of feminist aspects in Le Guin s novel The Dispossessed: An ambiguous Utopia . The novel won several important literary awards such as the Hugo and the Nebula and gained a lot of respect among critics for its great literary qualities and its extensive exploration of political ideas and social themes including for example anarchism capitalism and socialism. It is set on the fictional planets Urras and Anarres which inhabit two contrasting societies one capitalist and class oriented and the other one following the principles of anarchism avoiding any form of social hierarch