(urth) 5HX
Gerry Quinn
gerry at bindweed.com
Sun Aug 24 11:28:21 PDT 2014
On 24/08/2014 17:52, Marc Aramini wrote:
> It takes about three days for Marsch to be reborn on Easter Sunday
> from the bite as something different - his body undergoes a harrowing
> over that period of time. The existence of two alien races is simple:
> it creates a means for "Other" to be persecuted - abo incarcerated by
> humans or shadow child incarcerated by abos who believe themselves to
> be human. Abo incarcerated by abo makes no sense. The officer making a
> slave open the document with a knife and then showering
> prophylactically shows a strange unhandiness and a fear of saliva.
> This multiplication of species must serve a narrative purpose. The
> switch of Sandwalker to Eastwind and the human landers suddenly not
> knowing what open hands mean shows the climactic switch when humans
> are replaced by abos who now believe themselves to be humans. Why
> bring up Liev's postulate at all if it isn't even a possibility? It
> is present in the text. So are meta statements like "don't ask me how
> big a child is". The details of A Story honestly don't make much
> sense unless they are pointing to a symbolic representation of
> Marsch's fate to elucidate the two life cycles at work - larval,
> adult, sessile carapace/tree and an infectious empathic one.
>
We *have* a means for 'Other' to be persecuted: abos persecuted by
humans (and of course plenty of intra-human persecution, particularly on
Sainte Croix).
Why can't the officer simply fear spirochaetes of the ordinary kind? He
shares the girl with the other officers. If people on Sainte Croix are
terrified of being infected by alien mind-controlling parasites (or by
the wrong sort of alien mind-controlling parasites) why don't we hear
more about it than a passing reference to an officer who likes to wash
after sex?
The French landers hold up open hands - it is Sandwalker who doesn't
understand the significance because his people don't use weapons.
The major advantage of the interpretation, boring as it might seem, in
which nearly everyone in normal society (now) is human apart from a few
abos who slip under the radar, is that no character in any of the three
novellas is required to be completely delusial about concrete matters.
- Gerry Quinn
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