Hain (planet)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| This article or section needs sources or references that appear in reliable, third-party publications. Primary sources and sources affiliated with the subject of the article are generally not sufficient for a Wikipedia article. Please include more appropriate citations from reliable sources, or discuss the issue on the talk page. This article has been tagged since February 2008. |
Hain is a fictional planet that plays an important background role in the science fiction novels of Ursula K. Le Guin's Hainish Cycle. It is described more closely in some later short stories. It is the oldest culture in both the League of Worlds and later the Ekumen. Observers like Genly Ai in The Left Hand of Darkness are trained on Hain.
Contents |
[edit] History
Hain is also known as Davenant or Hain-Davenant. Its people cannot readily be distinguished from Earth-humans, but they have evolved differences, including the ability not to conceive children or father them without a conscious decision to do so. [1] It once had a high-technology culture, and also seeded humans or humanoids on various planets, including Earth and other worlds now in the Ekumen. Exact details are no longer known, but the history of the people of Hain goes back three millions years. [2] Knowledge has mostly not been lost, but is used more wisely.
The 'Ekumen' is very loosely knit, with Hain at the centre but not ruling. The Hainish attitude was different during the "vast Hainish expansion of the Fore-Eras". It is mentioned in The Left Hand of Darkness that the original Hainish culture probably created the Gethenians as an experiment.
From the older high-tech culture there was a crash and a re-building on a wiser basis. Evidence of the former high-tech life is all around, along with proof of the current indifference to it:
- Stse is an almost-island, separated from the mainland of the great south continent by marshes and tidal bogs, where millions of wading birds gather to mate and nest. Ruins of an enormous bridge are visible on the landward side, and another half-sunk fragment of ruin is the basis of the town's boat pier and breakwater. Vast works of other ages encumber all Hain, and are no more and no less venerable or interesting to the Hainish than the rest of the landscape.[3]
[edit] Tales about Hain
Three of the short stories in A Fisherman of the Inland Sea include details of life on Hain. More is seen in the first half of A Man of the People in Four Ways to Forgiveness. Havzhiva is a man who grows up on Hain, though he ends up working for the Hainish embassy on Yeowe. We see the ruins of past technology and learn of the highly localised social order that exists on some parts of the planet.
[edit] References
[edit] Third-party mentions
- Entry on Le Guin from UXL Newsmakers in 2005 (from findarticles.com) "The Hainish were a race of beings from the planet Hain who have colonized all planets of the Universe that will sustain them."
- Cadden, Michael Ursula K. Le Guin Beyond Genre: Fiction For Children And Adults, 2004; ISBN 0415972183 " "The pattern is typical: he begins on Hain (or another long-time planet of the Ekumen)" p. 64

