Is there anything to support this Wikipedia claim about Ursula K. Le Guin re-using the planet name...












20














Comments to Lorendiac's answer in this question pointed out an odd coincidence -- Ursula K. Le Guin may have used the same planet name ("Werel") to refer to different worlds in different stories:




  • The related 1960s novels Planet of Exile and City of Illusions


  • The 1995 novella collection Four Ways to Forgiveness



The Wikipedia article for Four Ways to Forgiveness claims




This 'Werel' is not the same as the world called Werel in Le Guin's Planet of Exile and City of Illusions.




but there isn't any citation or explanation why.



Both novels are set in the "Hainish Cycle" universe and both involve liberation from slavery. In PoEx and CoI the Werelese are liberators but in FWtF they are the enslavers.



Is there any statement from LeGuin herself about any relation (or lack thereof) between the Werels in the two story sets, or is it inferred only from the text?










share|improve this question




















  • 3




    As an aside, in any sufficiently realistic work planet names will be deliberately duplicated, for much the same reason there is, e.g., more than one city named Dover, only more so.
    – Harry Johnston
    Jan 1 at 18:39
















20














Comments to Lorendiac's answer in this question pointed out an odd coincidence -- Ursula K. Le Guin may have used the same planet name ("Werel") to refer to different worlds in different stories:




  • The related 1960s novels Planet of Exile and City of Illusions


  • The 1995 novella collection Four Ways to Forgiveness



The Wikipedia article for Four Ways to Forgiveness claims




This 'Werel' is not the same as the world called Werel in Le Guin's Planet of Exile and City of Illusions.




but there isn't any citation or explanation why.



Both novels are set in the "Hainish Cycle" universe and both involve liberation from slavery. In PoEx and CoI the Werelese are liberators but in FWtF they are the enslavers.



Is there any statement from LeGuin herself about any relation (or lack thereof) between the Werels in the two story sets, or is it inferred only from the text?










share|improve this question




















  • 3




    As an aside, in any sufficiently realistic work planet names will be deliberately duplicated, for much the same reason there is, e.g., more than one city named Dover, only more so.
    – Harry Johnston
    Jan 1 at 18:39














20












20








20


2





Comments to Lorendiac's answer in this question pointed out an odd coincidence -- Ursula K. Le Guin may have used the same planet name ("Werel") to refer to different worlds in different stories:




  • The related 1960s novels Planet of Exile and City of Illusions


  • The 1995 novella collection Four Ways to Forgiveness



The Wikipedia article for Four Ways to Forgiveness claims




This 'Werel' is not the same as the world called Werel in Le Guin's Planet of Exile and City of Illusions.




but there isn't any citation or explanation why.



Both novels are set in the "Hainish Cycle" universe and both involve liberation from slavery. In PoEx and CoI the Werelese are liberators but in FWtF they are the enslavers.



Is there any statement from LeGuin herself about any relation (or lack thereof) between the Werels in the two story sets, or is it inferred only from the text?










share|improve this question















Comments to Lorendiac's answer in this question pointed out an odd coincidence -- Ursula K. Le Guin may have used the same planet name ("Werel") to refer to different worlds in different stories:




  • The related 1960s novels Planet of Exile and City of Illusions


  • The 1995 novella collection Four Ways to Forgiveness



The Wikipedia article for Four Ways to Forgiveness claims




This 'Werel' is not the same as the world called Werel in Le Guin's Planet of Exile and City of Illusions.




but there isn't any citation or explanation why.



Both novels are set in the "Hainish Cycle" universe and both involve liberation from slavery. In PoEx and CoI the Werelese are liberators but in FWtF they are the enslavers.



Is there any statement from LeGuin herself about any relation (or lack thereof) between the Werels in the two story sets, or is it inferred only from the text?







ursula-k-le-guin hainish-cycle






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jan 1 at 18:25

























asked Jan 1 at 17:33









Spencer

5181515




5181515








  • 3




    As an aside, in any sufficiently realistic work planet names will be deliberately duplicated, for much the same reason there is, e.g., more than one city named Dover, only more so.
    – Harry Johnston
    Jan 1 at 18:39














  • 3




    As an aside, in any sufficiently realistic work planet names will be deliberately duplicated, for much the same reason there is, e.g., more than one city named Dover, only more so.
    – Harry Johnston
    Jan 1 at 18:39








3




3




As an aside, in any sufficiently realistic work planet names will be deliberately duplicated, for much the same reason there is, e.g., more than one city named Dover, only more so.
– Harry Johnston
Jan 1 at 18:39




As an aside, in any sufficiently realistic work planet names will be deliberately duplicated, for much the same reason there is, e.g., more than one city named Dover, only more so.
– Harry Johnston
Jan 1 at 18:39










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















27














If you follow the source linked in the Wikipedia article it quotes LeGuin with saying in an open letter that she had "simply forgot" that she had used the name already. Also the planets are described differently. Screenshot from Google Books:



enter image description here



The book is: Erlich, Richard D. (2009). Coyote's Song: The Teaching Stories of Ursula K. Le Guin. Milford series: Popular writers of today. 72. Wildside Press. p. 432. ISBN 9781434457752.






share|improve this answer



















  • 3




    I'm always loath to quote from preview-only Google Books sources, especially given LeGuin's fierce vocal opposition to what she perceived as Google's disregarding of copyright. It would be great to see the "Open Letter" itself.
    – Spencer
    Jan 1 at 17:50






  • 11




    @Spencer, personally I'd loathe to leave my wife's sick bed to drive home and pick the book from the shelf just so I can quote it first hand, so Google books is all that you'll get from me. I may understand your feelings about this, but that doesn't make the answer wrong.
    – Eike Pierstorff
    Jan 1 at 17:59






  • 4




    @Eike You have my upvote but there's the matter of the prudent 24-hour soak before accepting an answer (in addition to Valorum's providing a great source for an edit).
    – Spencer
    Jan 1 at 18:10






  • 1




    @V2Blast: Even if a screen reader could OCR the text, it won't, because the image's alt text is set to "enter image description here" (so that's what the screen reader will say).
    – Kevin
    2 days ago






  • 1




    @Spencer, sorry, my comment came out all wrong, didn't it? I just wanted to point out that I did not deprive any author of his royalties, since that seems to worry you. Google books was just a convenience while I am not at home.
    – Eike Pierstorff
    2 days ago











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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









27














If you follow the source linked in the Wikipedia article it quotes LeGuin with saying in an open letter that she had "simply forgot" that she had used the name already. Also the planets are described differently. Screenshot from Google Books:



enter image description here



The book is: Erlich, Richard D. (2009). Coyote's Song: The Teaching Stories of Ursula K. Le Guin. Milford series: Popular writers of today. 72. Wildside Press. p. 432. ISBN 9781434457752.






share|improve this answer



















  • 3




    I'm always loath to quote from preview-only Google Books sources, especially given LeGuin's fierce vocal opposition to what she perceived as Google's disregarding of copyright. It would be great to see the "Open Letter" itself.
    – Spencer
    Jan 1 at 17:50






  • 11




    @Spencer, personally I'd loathe to leave my wife's sick bed to drive home and pick the book from the shelf just so I can quote it first hand, so Google books is all that you'll get from me. I may understand your feelings about this, but that doesn't make the answer wrong.
    – Eike Pierstorff
    Jan 1 at 17:59






  • 4




    @Eike You have my upvote but there's the matter of the prudent 24-hour soak before accepting an answer (in addition to Valorum's providing a great source for an edit).
    – Spencer
    Jan 1 at 18:10






  • 1




    @V2Blast: Even if a screen reader could OCR the text, it won't, because the image's alt text is set to "enter image description here" (so that's what the screen reader will say).
    – Kevin
    2 days ago






  • 1




    @Spencer, sorry, my comment came out all wrong, didn't it? I just wanted to point out that I did not deprive any author of his royalties, since that seems to worry you. Google books was just a convenience while I am not at home.
    – Eike Pierstorff
    2 days ago
















27














If you follow the source linked in the Wikipedia article it quotes LeGuin with saying in an open letter that she had "simply forgot" that she had used the name already. Also the planets are described differently. Screenshot from Google Books:



enter image description here



The book is: Erlich, Richard D. (2009). Coyote's Song: The Teaching Stories of Ursula K. Le Guin. Milford series: Popular writers of today. 72. Wildside Press. p. 432. ISBN 9781434457752.






share|improve this answer



















  • 3




    I'm always loath to quote from preview-only Google Books sources, especially given LeGuin's fierce vocal opposition to what she perceived as Google's disregarding of copyright. It would be great to see the "Open Letter" itself.
    – Spencer
    Jan 1 at 17:50






  • 11




    @Spencer, personally I'd loathe to leave my wife's sick bed to drive home and pick the book from the shelf just so I can quote it first hand, so Google books is all that you'll get from me. I may understand your feelings about this, but that doesn't make the answer wrong.
    – Eike Pierstorff
    Jan 1 at 17:59






  • 4




    @Eike You have my upvote but there's the matter of the prudent 24-hour soak before accepting an answer (in addition to Valorum's providing a great source for an edit).
    – Spencer
    Jan 1 at 18:10






  • 1




    @V2Blast: Even if a screen reader could OCR the text, it won't, because the image's alt text is set to "enter image description here" (so that's what the screen reader will say).
    – Kevin
    2 days ago






  • 1




    @Spencer, sorry, my comment came out all wrong, didn't it? I just wanted to point out that I did not deprive any author of his royalties, since that seems to worry you. Google books was just a convenience while I am not at home.
    – Eike Pierstorff
    2 days ago














27












27








27






If you follow the source linked in the Wikipedia article it quotes LeGuin with saying in an open letter that she had "simply forgot" that she had used the name already. Also the planets are described differently. Screenshot from Google Books:



enter image description here



The book is: Erlich, Richard D. (2009). Coyote's Song: The Teaching Stories of Ursula K. Le Guin. Milford series: Popular writers of today. 72. Wildside Press. p. 432. ISBN 9781434457752.






share|improve this answer














If you follow the source linked in the Wikipedia article it quotes LeGuin with saying in an open letter that she had "simply forgot" that she had used the name already. Also the planets are described differently. Screenshot from Google Books:



enter image description here



The book is: Erlich, Richard D. (2009). Coyote's Song: The Teaching Stories of Ursula K. Le Guin. Milford series: Popular writers of today. 72. Wildside Press. p. 432. ISBN 9781434457752.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Jan 2 at 0:05









V2Blast

13219




13219










answered Jan 1 at 17:42









Eike Pierstorff

8,54723538




8,54723538








  • 3




    I'm always loath to quote from preview-only Google Books sources, especially given LeGuin's fierce vocal opposition to what she perceived as Google's disregarding of copyright. It would be great to see the "Open Letter" itself.
    – Spencer
    Jan 1 at 17:50






  • 11




    @Spencer, personally I'd loathe to leave my wife's sick bed to drive home and pick the book from the shelf just so I can quote it first hand, so Google books is all that you'll get from me. I may understand your feelings about this, but that doesn't make the answer wrong.
    – Eike Pierstorff
    Jan 1 at 17:59






  • 4




    @Eike You have my upvote but there's the matter of the prudent 24-hour soak before accepting an answer (in addition to Valorum's providing a great source for an edit).
    – Spencer
    Jan 1 at 18:10






  • 1




    @V2Blast: Even if a screen reader could OCR the text, it won't, because the image's alt text is set to "enter image description here" (so that's what the screen reader will say).
    – Kevin
    2 days ago






  • 1




    @Spencer, sorry, my comment came out all wrong, didn't it? I just wanted to point out that I did not deprive any author of his royalties, since that seems to worry you. Google books was just a convenience while I am not at home.
    – Eike Pierstorff
    2 days ago














  • 3




    I'm always loath to quote from preview-only Google Books sources, especially given LeGuin's fierce vocal opposition to what she perceived as Google's disregarding of copyright. It would be great to see the "Open Letter" itself.
    – Spencer
    Jan 1 at 17:50






  • 11




    @Spencer, personally I'd loathe to leave my wife's sick bed to drive home and pick the book from the shelf just so I can quote it first hand, so Google books is all that you'll get from me. I may understand your feelings about this, but that doesn't make the answer wrong.
    – Eike Pierstorff
    Jan 1 at 17:59






  • 4




    @Eike You have my upvote but there's the matter of the prudent 24-hour soak before accepting an answer (in addition to Valorum's providing a great source for an edit).
    – Spencer
    Jan 1 at 18:10






  • 1




    @V2Blast: Even if a screen reader could OCR the text, it won't, because the image's alt text is set to "enter image description here" (so that's what the screen reader will say).
    – Kevin
    2 days ago






  • 1




    @Spencer, sorry, my comment came out all wrong, didn't it? I just wanted to point out that I did not deprive any author of his royalties, since that seems to worry you. Google books was just a convenience while I am not at home.
    – Eike Pierstorff
    2 days ago








3




3




I'm always loath to quote from preview-only Google Books sources, especially given LeGuin's fierce vocal opposition to what she perceived as Google's disregarding of copyright. It would be great to see the "Open Letter" itself.
– Spencer
Jan 1 at 17:50




I'm always loath to quote from preview-only Google Books sources, especially given LeGuin's fierce vocal opposition to what she perceived as Google's disregarding of copyright. It would be great to see the "Open Letter" itself.
– Spencer
Jan 1 at 17:50




11




11




@Spencer, personally I'd loathe to leave my wife's sick bed to drive home and pick the book from the shelf just so I can quote it first hand, so Google books is all that you'll get from me. I may understand your feelings about this, but that doesn't make the answer wrong.
– Eike Pierstorff
Jan 1 at 17:59




@Spencer, personally I'd loathe to leave my wife's sick bed to drive home and pick the book from the shelf just so I can quote it first hand, so Google books is all that you'll get from me. I may understand your feelings about this, but that doesn't make the answer wrong.
– Eike Pierstorff
Jan 1 at 17:59




4




4




@Eike You have my upvote but there's the matter of the prudent 24-hour soak before accepting an answer (in addition to Valorum's providing a great source for an edit).
– Spencer
Jan 1 at 18:10




@Eike You have my upvote but there's the matter of the prudent 24-hour soak before accepting an answer (in addition to Valorum's providing a great source for an edit).
– Spencer
Jan 1 at 18:10




1




1




@V2Blast: Even if a screen reader could OCR the text, it won't, because the image's alt text is set to "enter image description here" (so that's what the screen reader will say).
– Kevin
2 days ago




@V2Blast: Even if a screen reader could OCR the text, it won't, because the image's alt text is set to "enter image description here" (so that's what the screen reader will say).
– Kevin
2 days ago




1




1




@Spencer, sorry, my comment came out all wrong, didn't it? I just wanted to point out that I did not deprive any author of his royalties, since that seems to worry you. Google books was just a convenience while I am not at home.
– Eike Pierstorff
2 days ago




@Spencer, sorry, my comment came out all wrong, didn't it? I just wanted to point out that I did not deprive any author of his royalties, since that seems to worry you. Google books was just a convenience while I am not at home.
– Eike Pierstorff
2 days ago


















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