(urth) Merger
Gerry Quinn
gerryq at indigo.ie
Mon Jan 31 15:21:26 PST 2011
From: "Lee Berman" <severiansola at hotmail.com>
> I think "unmanning" (they never say "castration" but c'mon..) was
> necessary not for
> the purposes mentioned by the characters. As elsewhere argued, a simple
> vasectomy
> would have prevented an Appian dynasty. But Wolfe needed more than just a
> sterile
> male for this story. He needed an androgyne. Why?
>
> It is my argument that the story needed an androgyne to point to the
> subtext which is
> never openly spelled out: a Dionysus-like demiurge has created all we
> see. The god
> Dionysus was androgynous and we see his echo in the old Autarch. Also in
> the Green Man,
> in Tzadkiel and perhaps in the two-sided male/female coin which is
> Inire/Cumaean.
If in a book of a thousand pages, a relatively minor character is an
androgyne, it hardly points to anything in particular, any more than another
character being half-man, half-robot. And Dionysus was hardly the only
deity with androgynous aspects. But that is beside the point::
The autarch is *not* an androgyne, although Severian mistook him for one
when they first met. He is neuter. Those are quite different things.
Is there a lot of other androgyny in BotNS? Hardly. A woman with a deep
voice or a man from the future with a high-pitched voice are hardly
indicators. There are two cacogens of different species who have made their
hoimes on Urth; one is male and the other is female - and that's supposed to
be a pointer to androgynity? I could walk down a street of any city today
and spot more androgynity than this lot.
Where is the evidence for a Dionysus-like demiurge anyway? Presumably every
cosmic cycle was created by the same entity, including that of Urth and our
own if it is different. This entity is known on Urth as the Increate or the
Pancreator. No special characteristics are ascribed to him; in particular
there is no suggestion in the text of androgyny.
The BotLS has a new pantheon. Apart from the gods of Mainframe, we have the
Outsider, whom it seems clear is identified by Wolfe as the god of
Christianity under another name. [In the lists of characters, we can even
find the three aspects of the Trinity delineated.] It's also suggested that
Ah Lah is an alternative name for the Outsider. It can hardly be doubted
that Increate and Pancreator are also alternate names.
You could perhaps find a suggestion of androgyny in Silk hearing the
Outsider talking in two voices, a man's and a woman's - but I think he
suggests that in fact he has more voices than two. Top candidates for
symbols of androgyny on the Whorl appear to be Incus and Titi - but it is
hard to argue that their presence indicates anything more than an attempt at
a naturalistic spectrum of characters.
In RttW Dionysus is referenced, and Silk agrees that he may also be the
Outsider. But why not - this is known to be the case for Allah and the
Increate! Although wine is involved, the symbology invoked/evoked by Silk
on Blue appear more Christian than Dionysian.
Finally, why link Dionysus to the concept of a demiurge? Are they
classically identified? Is the universe of Urth especially Dionysian in
aspect? I don't see anything especially Dionysian about it at all.
- Gerry Quinn
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