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Related: About this forumUrsula K. Le Guin gives a powerful speech at the National Book Awards
Accepting a lifetime achievement award last night, she indicted the literary establishment and Amazon.com, calling for the end of the commodification of art.
RufusTFirefly
(8,812 posts)Despite what some people think, they don't all wear black and break windows.
And, by the way, this is a great speech -- a warning from a wise woman and a great artist.
DreamGypsy
(2,252 posts)...it is freedom.
http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2014/11/20/365434149/book-news-ursula-k-le-guin-steals-the-show-at-the-national-book-awards
Book News: Ursula K. Le Guin Steals The Show At The National Book Awards]
She reserved her most incendiary language for the recently resolved pricing dispute between Amazon and the publisher Hachette Book Group.
"We just saw a profiteer try to punish a publisher for disobedience, and writers threatened by corporate fatwa," she said. "And I see a lot of us, the producers, accepting this letting commodity profiteers sell us like deodorant!"
"The crowd went wild," Mayer noted. "Really, you could have ended the evening there and almost everyone would have gone home happy except for the Amazon contingent, who notably had no comment on Le Guin's speech, or the ribbing they endured throughout the night."
And at the after-party, the speech was still on people's minds, including Jynne Martin, the associate publisher at Riverhead books. As she told Mayer, it was "the most ferocious speech ever given at the National Book Awards."
Such is the world as viewed through The Eye of the Heron.
Thank you, Ms. Le Guin, you truly made a distinguished contribution to American letters ... and to the lives of all the citizens of the planet.
Thanks for the post, sweetloukillbot.
sweetloukillbot
(12,663 posts)This speech really hit me, I was initially interested because of her indictment of lit-fic snobs - an argument I've been having since college, but her points on Capitalism and Amazon and the commodification of art were even more powerful.
But when she talked about looking back at the end of her career, I got a little choked up. She is such a treasure.
I read the Earthsea Trilogy (at that time that's all it was!) when I was a kid 30 years ago, and I've just rediscovered her more mature work. She is a prophetic and powerful voice. The Left Hand of Darkness is a mind-blowing examination of gender.
I saw Kim Stanley Robinson speak a few weeks ago, and I swear I saw her in the audience, but it was in Phoenix and I have no idea why she would have been in town with him (although they both fall into the anarcho/enviromental/feminist sci-fi crowd).
List left
(630 posts)cprise
(8,445 posts)Billionaires With Big Ideas Are Privatizing American Science
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/16/science/billionaires-with-big-ideas-are-privatizing-american-science.html
They are not the same thing, though it occurs to me one may be the stepping stone to the latter.
MrMickeysMom
(20,453 posts)Okay
..
And, I am not a member of this club of readers (well, yes, I am, but not as much literature as I ought to)
Thanks for the post. The message rings true.