Submitted by feanor_imc t3_1096m8m in books
How is it possible that a short story can transmit such a powerful message? I don't want to spoil anything because it is a short story, but the impression it gaves you when you finished it... It's been a week and I am still feeling it.
Every time I think about it, I can make a new lecture about Omelas and The Ones who walk away.
I have read Catwings, A Wizard of Earthsea and The Left Hand of Darkness but nothing prepared me for this.
owensum t1_j3wiu3l wrote
FYI it's actually derived from a scene in The Brother Karamazov by Dostoevsky, in which he explores the doctrine of salvation, i.e., how one individual (Jesus) can suffer for all of mankind, and in the process derived an early form of utilitarianism. Le Guin had forgotten about this scene but was inspired by a short passage by the philosopher William James, which had been adapted from Brothers K.