The Eye of the Heron: Difference between revisions

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{{quote| ''They walked, they walked, they walked, across the fields of France and across the fields of Germany and across the high mountains of Spain, weeks they walked and months they walked, singing the songs of peace, and so they came at last, ten thousand strong, to the end of the land and the beginning of the sea, to the City Lisboa, where the ships had been promised them. And there the ships lay in harbour.''}}
 
A short novel by [[Ursula K. Le Guin]], first published in 1978, which, according to the [[Word of God]], may or may not be a part of the Hainish Cycle. The story takes place on a planet called [[Meaningful Name|Victoria]], which has been chosen by the people from Earth to be a penal colony. The inhabitants of the planet are divided into two groups: the descendants of regular criminals and those of the radical pacifists whose ideas were considered too revolutionary to let them spread. Each group has its own social structure and worldview, along with a theory about the reasons of their having been sent to the same place and thus doomed to eternally coexist. Although the protagonist is the warrior leader's daughter who feels drawn to a boy from the other side of the conflict, the story is not another version of ''[[Pocahontas]]'', nor does it end as may be expected.<br />Arguably, the text marks the beginning of feminist themes in Le Guin's fiction, as Luz Marina has to become sort of a leader using the skills which she has learned, willy or nilly, in her male-dominated social environment. (Also, the appearance and meaning of mysterous herons brings to mind theories of interpretation based on the notion of the Other.) As usual in the case of Le Guin, the opposition between anger and quietness is an important factor.
 
=== Contains the following tropes: ===
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* [[Banana Republic]]: the City has many features of it.
* [[Bilingual Bonus]]: the name of [[wikipedia:Shanti|Shantih]].
* [[Call a Smeerp Aa Rabbit]]: titular herons. However, it is perfectly justified, as the inhabitants of Victoria know the names of the animals from Earth but do not remember their exact looks.
* [[The Chief's Daughter]]: Luz Marina.
* [[Closer to Earth]]: the Shanty Towners in general, and women in particular. Played as usual in Le Guin's fiction.
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* [[Deliberate Values Dissonance]].
* [[Does This Remind You of Anything?]]: the City culture with its Latin-American names. Guess from which language comes the word 'macho'?
* [[Fantasy -Forbidding Father]]: Falco to Luz Marina.
* [[Fighting For Aa Homeland]]: the Shanty Towners.
* [[Gilded Cage]]: the situation of Luz Marina.
* [[Going Native]]: Luz Marina in Shantih.