(urth) Losing Imitation
James Wynn
crushtv at gmail.com
Wed Dec 29 09:42:58 PST 2010
>
>> Aunt Jeannine: "Number Five, you're too young for semantics and I'm afraid you've been led
>> astray by that word 'perfect'...The imitation could hardly have been exact, since human
>> beings don't possess that talent and to imitate them 'perfectly' the abos would have to lose
>> it." Number Five: "Couldn't they?" Aunt Jeannine: "My dear child, abilties of every sort must evolve. And when they do they must
>> be utilized or they atrophy. If the abos had been able to mimic so well as to lose the power to do so, that would have been the end of them, and no doubt it would have come long before the first ships reached them...."
>
>
> Thus inhumi on Urth, dream-travel be damned, cannot be perfect imitations of humans. They have the
> ability to shift back to their original form and have not, can not lose it, on basic evolutionary
> principles. (according to Auntie Gene anyway)
> Of course Aunt Jeannine goes on to say:
>
>> "veil, who wants a dramatic explanation for the cruelty and irrationality he sees around him, has
>> hung fifty pounds of theory on nothing".
> I'm sure most remember that Aunt Jeannine IS Dr Veil. Hilarious that Wolfe has anticipated both the
> wild theorists about his work and the conservative nay-sayers in one character. Which is he implying
> are the correct ones?
I don't think this applies to the inhumi and I think you have
misinterpreted the lesson. I think Wolfe is making a statement about
colonization here. It has always gone on. One group arriving to push out
the previous one. But in order for the colonization to stick, the
arrivals with have to take on the customs and eventually even the
appearance of the natives--those attributes were not invented out of
nothing. So the arrivals become the natives--in this case, by the
natives becoming the arrivals. And the native environment is huge and
inexhaustible. The arrivals will never overwhelm the environment's
ability to absorb them. When Marsch goes into the outback, he finds abos
existing quite happily occassionally taking the form of cats or
four-eyed elks. He even find the abos in their original native state:
lurid, white worms.
As for the inhumi, when they are in dream-travel, they aren't mimicking.
That is who they really are without the clothing of their bodies. They
are no more mimicking than Cilinia was mimicking a night chough (as Pas
did before her). Returning to their reptilian form is only a matter
putting their old clothes back on.
u+16b9
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