The Dispossessed: an Ideological Distopia
Gaziantep University Journal of Social Sciences (http://jss.gantep.edu.tr)
2013 12(1):123-133
ISSN: 1303-0094
The Dispossessed: an Ideological Distopia
Mülksüzler: İdeolojik Bir Distopya
Ela İpek Gündüz
Gaziantep Üniversitesi
Abstract
Ursula K. Le Guin, in her dystopian novel The Dispossessed creates two opposite worlds.
Both worlds have contrasting ideologies: a non-authoritarian planet called Anarres, in which
individuals experience freedom consciously and deliberately in their own terms (by the
equal distribution of the power dynamics in an anarchic society), and its moon Urras with its
authoritarian governmental system (both by a capitalist country called A-İo, and by a
communist country Thu). Through her depiction of these reverse poles Le Guin achieves to
mirror the failure of different kinds of governmental systems which are the practices of the
ideologies. These administrative systems fail because they cannot obtain pursuit of human
freedom and happiness. According to Le Guin, the ideological representations of the
governments are doomed to failure because in spite of their being imaginary systems to
create a sphere of happiness for human beings, they are apart from being ideal and they have
misapplications.
In this article, the systematic unconscious effects of ideology (in an Alhusserian sense) on
social, economic and political issues and the influences of the governmental organization on
alienating the individuals to themselves by restricting their creativity and trust for
themselves will be highlighted with the help of Le Guin’s two opposite dystopian worlds.
Therefore, although these two opposite worlds have different ideologies, in the end they
both turn out to be distopias. Le Guin proposes a solution to the problem of searching
human happiness within the ideologies (represented in the administrative systems) by
replacing it with the individual (who could change himself, get rid of all the prejudices,
transgress all the boundaries).
Key Words: ideology, dystopia, hegemony, ideological state apparatuses, Ursula K. Le
Guin
Özet
Ursula K. Le Guin Mülksüzler adlı romanında birbirine zıt ideolojilere sahip iki dünya
yaratır. Biri, bir devlet düzeni olmayan Anarres adındaki gezegen (ki bu ülkedeki insanlar
bilinçli ve istekli bir şekilde özgürlüklerini anarşik bir toplumdaki eşit şekilde dağıtılan güç
dinamikleriyle tecrübe etmektedirler); diğeri de onun uydusu olan Urras’tır ki (Urras’taki
kapitalist A-İo, ve komünist Thu adlı ülkelerle betimlenir) ve otoriter devlet sistemini
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The Dispossessed: an Ideological Distopia
yansıtır. Bu iki zıt kutbu yaratarak Le Guin ideolojilerin uygulanmaları olan değişik yönetim
biçimlerinin başarısızlıklarını yansıtmayı başarır. Le Guin’e göre, ideolojilerin temsil
edildiği devletlerin başarısızlığı, insanlara ortak bir hayali ideal olan uzlaşma ortamını
sağlayıp, onlara mutluluk dolu bir ortam yaratamamasıdır. Le Guin’e gore, ideolojilerin
temsil edildiği devletler başarısızlığa mahkûmdur çünkü insanlara mutluluk sağlamak için
oluşturulmuş hayali sistemlerdir ama ideal olmaktan uzaktırlar ve yanlış uygulamaları
vardır.
Bu makalede, sosyal, ekonomik ve politik bağlamlarda ideolojinin sistematik bilinçaltı
etkileri (Althusser’in görüşleriyle), ve yönetimsel organizasyonların bireylerin kendilerine
olan güvenlerini ve yaratıcılıklarını kısıtlayarak nasıl kendilerine yabancılaştırıldıkları Le
Guin’in romanındaki distopik dünya yardımıyla incelenecektir. Böylece, farklı ideolojilere
sahip bu her iki zıt dünyanın distopyaya nasıl dönüştüğü anlaşılacaktır. Sonuç olarak, Le
Guin insanların devletin içinde mutluluğu arama sorununa, devlet düzenlerine değil de,
(bütün sınırları aşabilecek olan) bireye odaklanarak, çözüm bulmaya çalıştığı görülecektir.
Anahtar Kelimeler: ideoloji, distopya, egemenlik, ideolojik devlet aygıtları, Ursula K.
LeGuin
I. INTRODUCTION
When the development of the term “utopia” is considered, Plato’s The
Republic could be regarded as the first work devising an ideal society in which
conditions are as equal and preferable for all citizens. It is a utopian world created
for the welfare of the human beings by a well-structured social and governmental
system. Whereas, Thomas Moore in Utopia proposes individual participation in
politics against the governmental abuse of power. Afterwards, the concept of
sharing and the collective good becomes the main theme of the utopias. However,
current utopian texts turn out to be dystopian as a result of the impossibility of the
utopias and even the dreams turn out to be the nightmares of the people 1 .
Ursula K. Le Guin creates her novel the Dispossessed by using dystopia as a
genre because utopianism has finished and with the definite examples from history
such as America and Soviet Union (that were supposed to be utopias) turned into
failures and dystopias. The socialist utopia of the Soviets became the totalitarian
dystopia of Stalinism and the free/liberal utopia of America turned into hypocrite
dystopia of capitalism (Kumar, 1987: 594). Le Guin attempts to depict these real
dystopias with an imaginary anarchic one to show the ambiguity of the social order.
Moreover, even the idealized anarchic society Anarres turns out to be a failure in
the sense that still the system exploits the individual. Furthermore, Le Guin in her
novel depicts the utopianist aspect of Marxism in the sense that Marx and Engels
expect to have a kind of revolution through which individuals will experience a
kind of self-realization by the removal of the exploitation of the capitalist systems,
1
exploringutopia.weebly.com
Gündüz E.I/ JSS 12(1) (2013):123-133
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but she reverses this expectancy by showing the revolutionized country Anarres as a
dystopian world. Therefore, for Le Guin the solution is not focused on the
administrative systems or the public in general; instead she emphasizes the
importance of the individual efforts to understand the importance of the social
welfare.
Ursula K. Le Guin, in The Dispossessed imagines a non-authoritarian country called Anarres- in which individuals consciously and deliberately experience their
potential of experiencing freedom by the equal distribution of the power dynamics
in an anarchic society. In contrast, its moon Urras with its authoritarian
governmental system – both by a capitalist ruling system of A-İo (representing
USA), and by a communist system of Thu (representing) USSR – fails to create a
sphere of happiness for human beings. Therefore, as Le Guin reflects in one way or
another, consciously or unconsciously, the systematic unconscious effects of
ideology (in an Alhusserian sense) on social, economic and political issues and the
effects of the governmental organization on alienating the individuals to themselves
by restricting their creativity and trust for themselves is inevitable. Therefore, her
novel is titled as “an Ambiguous Utopia” (...truncated)