truepenny: artist's rendering of Sidneyia inexpectans (Default)
[personal profile] truepenny
One component of the origin for Le Guin's Ekumen:

My dissertation reading at the moment is Victor Turner's From Ritual to Theatre: The Human Seriousness of Play (New York: PAJ Publications, 1982), and I'm bopping along watching him argue with other theories of symbolism (he doesn't care much for the semioticians), and hit this phrase:
... an honorable tradition of their predecessors, such as Durkheim and the Annee Sociologique school, and Kroeber, Redfield, and their successors, such as Professor Singer, who have examined cultural sub-systems in oikumenes (literally "inhabited worlds," used by Kroeber to indicate civilizational complexes, such as Christendom, Islam, Indic, and Chinese civilization, etc.) and Great Traditions.
(Turner 23-4)

Kroeber, of course, is what the K. in Ursula K. Le Guin stands for, and this Kroeber is her father, the noted anthropologist Theodore Kroeber. And oikumenes (from oikos, "house," the same root that gives us "economics") is etymologically the parent of Ekumen.

This almost makes it worthwhile to be reading performance theory at quarter after seven in the morning.

Date: 2003-06-18 06:36 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] oracne.livejournal.com
Yup. Cool, huh?

Date: 2003-06-18 01:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] laurashapiro.livejournal.com
Neeeeeeeeat.

Date: 2003-06-18 10:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] aquila1nz.livejournal.com
Cool.

I was desperately looking for references for a paper on library management the other day and came across an article about someone who had developed a classification scheme for fiction - and used Lefthand of Darkness for testing it and other systems. I thought of Le Guin complaining because Man in the High Castle gets shelved next to Brak the Barbarian instead of Great Expectations and smiled.

Date: 2003-06-19 02:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] loligo.livejournal.com
Odd -- I could have sworn that "ecumen" itself was a word in English, but the (abridged) dictionaries that I have on hand say no. You see the adjective "ecumenical" in religious writings all the time, and I just assumed (probably prompted by early exposure to LeGuin) that there was a noun form of the word in use as well. But apparently there isn't.

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