Volume 5, Number 2 &, Summer, 1987

A Dissenting View

By Ursula K. Le Guin

Reviewed by Joseph P. Martino
Summer, 1987

Any discussion of libertarian science fiction inevitably includes Ursula K. Le Guin's The Dispossessed. It is widely viewed as an outstanding depiction of a free society. The basic rule of the story's anarchistic society, that only the individual can make a moral choice strikes a sympathetic chord with lovers of freedom. Shevek, its main character, says the duty of the individual is … to be the initiator of his own acts, to be responsible, clearly making him a hero of freedom. It is with considerable trepidation, then that I offer a dissenting view. I think that The Dispossessed presents a badly flawed idea of freedom.

The story contrasts the “propertarian” society of A-Io with the anarchist society of Annares. But A-Io oppresses its citizens with innumerable economic and political regulations, and conscripts the lower classes to fight and die in imperialistic wars. Clearly, Ms. Le Guin is not portraying a free market society but instead something like Mussolini's corporate state, or 18th Century mercantilism.

The anarchist society, Shevek's home, doesn't have a money economy. Food, shelter, and housing are free. But the word free is misleading. Everyone must produce, but they have no claim on the product of their time. All production is confiscated. Is this freedom?

Annaresti production is carried out by voluntary syndicates or by individuals, but is coordinated by PDC, Production and Distribution Coordination organization, and its computers. But the mention of computers is just hand-waving. Computers must be provided with information. One of the most fundamental findings of economics in this century is that the function of a money economy is to transmit information about what things people want, and how they may be provided most efficiently. Without a price system no one could even know what should be produced, let alone how. That's why every centrally planned economy on the face of the earth allows some degree of market activity.

To her credit, Ms. Le Guin doesn't take the polemical route of contrasting the virtuous anarchists of Annares with the corrupt propertarians of A-Io. She portrays the anarchists as having both vices and virtues. One of Shevek's friends is a musician whose works do not please the Music Syndicate. He wants to write chamber music; the Syndicate prefers chorales. His work is censored because it doesn't fit the “Organic” style. Sabul, one of the leading physicists on Annares refuses to recommend Shevek's first major paper for publication unless Shevek allows Sabul to share credit. Without the recommendation, PDC will not allocate paper to print it. Shevek grudgingly gives in. Later Shevek wants to send one of his papers to A-Io. The defense Syndicate objects to “trading with the enemy,” and only by striking another humiliating bargain with Sabul can Shevek send the paper.

The idea here is that Annares is suffering from “creeping anarchism”, brought about by the weaknesses of the people. But again, Ms. Le Guin mistakenly portrays a free society. In the absence of government to enforce the monopolies, how did the music Syndicate gain control over what could be written? How did PDC gain control over allocation of paper?

If there really was no government, then no syndicate could monopolize any activity. If one music syndicate didn't like chamber music, a competing one might. If one defense syndicate became bureaucratic and arbitrary, people would deny support and switch to another. Without government enforcement, people would ignore any group which tried to coordinate production. The problems portrayed are not caused by the vices of the people, but by the centralization of supposedly anarchist Annares.

Sabul and Shevek's bargain over the physics paper exemplifies Ms. Le Guin's flawed view of freedom. For Ms. Le Guin, this corrupt bargain represents all voluntary exchange. Since both parties make a profit, all voluntary exchanges are exploitative and evil. Because she starts from this premise her idea of a free society is one in which all exchange, economic or other, is prohibited.

How does Ms. Le Guin get away with such a portrayal of freedom? Essentially because she is such a good writer one overlooks the flaws. Despite its great story, however, this book undermines freedom by misrepresenting it.

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