PASTORAL

PASTORAL
   The term "pastoral" can be understood in various ways. It can refer to the Classical or Shakespearean tale of courtiers holidaying among nymphs and shepherds; it can refer, as Sir William Empson (1906-1984) and other modern critics have argued, to the proletarian novel or to the story which contrasts childhood innocence with adult experience. In essence, however, a pastoral is any work of fiction which depicts an apparently simple and natural way of life, and contrasts it with our complex, technological, anxiety-ridden urban world of the present. Pastorals can be full of moral earnestness or they can be utterly escapist.Of the many versions of pastoral in sf, the most obvious is the tale of country life as written by Clifford D. SIMAK, Zenna HENDERSON and others. Such stories usuallyinvolve the intrusion of ALIEN beings (frequently telepathic) into rural landscapes peopled by farmers and small-town tradesmen. Examples are Simak's "Neighbor" (1954), "A Death in the House" (1959), WAY STATION(1963), All Flesh is Grass (1965) and A Choice of Gods (1972), and Henderson's PILGRIMAGE: THE BOOK OF THE PEOPLE (fixup 1961) and The Anything Box (coll 1965). Fantasies in a kindred mode include Ray BRADBURY's Dandelion Wine (fixup 1957), Ward MOORE's and Avram DAVIDSON's Joyleg (1962) and Manly Wade WELLMAN's Who Fears the Devil? (coll of linked stories 1963). What these works have in common is an emphasis on the virtues (and sometimes the constraints) of the rural way of life. They are, explicitly or implicitly, anti-city and anti- MACHINE; they frequently extol the values of living close to Nature, of being in rhythm with the seasons. This bucolic and Luddite strain in GENRE SF has its origins in some major works of US literature such as Walden (1854) by Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862) and Winesburg, Ohio (1919) by SherwoodAnderson (1876-1941), as well as in such UK UTOPIAS and romances as Richard JEFFERIES's After London (1885), with its vision of the city reconquered by forest and field, W.H. HUDSON's A Crystal Age (1887) and William MORRIS's News from Nowhere (1890 US).A variant form of thisversion of pastoral is that in which the contrast between city and country is made quite explicit. Stories of this type, discussed more fully in the entry on CITIES, have a long history, going back beyond After London. In this variant urban life is depicted as cruel, oppressive or sterile, while the country represents freedom; the genre-sf archetype is Arthur C. CLARKE's The City and the Stars (1956). It is a particularly popular themein CHILDREN'S SF, as in John CHRISTOPHER's Wild Jack (1974) and Isobelle CARMODY's Scatterlings (1991).A second version of pastoral, again takingits cue from Jefferies and Morris, is exemplified by George R. STEWART's Earth Abides (1949) and Leigh BRACKETT's The Long Tomorrow (1955), bothtales depicting the rise of agricultural and anti-technological societies after some sort of HOLOCAUST. Although this type of story is set in the future, the future becomes a clear analogue of the pre-industrial past. A particularly fine example is Fredric BROWN's "The Waveries" (1945), a tale in which the modern USA is forced back into a horse-and-buggy economy by invading aliens who prevent the use of electricity. Other examples of this kind of story are Pat FRANK's Alas, Babylon (1959) and Edgar PANGBORN's DAVY (1964). This sort of pastoral is not always simple; the pastoralpost-holocaust world can itself be seen with a little irony, as in John CROWLEY's ENGINE SUMMER (1979), which is suffused by an elegiacmelancholy. (Another ambiguous pastoral, not really sf, is Crowley's Little, Big (1981), where the ultimate pastoral values of Faerie are teasingly impossible to reach and, if reached, might mean death.)A third version of sf pastoral is the story set on another world, often Edenic or, at the least, satisfying. Such works usually depict benign alien ECOLOGIES which support nontechnological societies. Humanity is often seen as a destructive intruder upon these planets, although frequently the protagonist is "accepted" because he or she is capable of seeing the wisdom of the alien ways. The ideological thrust of such stories is anti-anthropomorphic and anti-xenophobic. Examples are Robert A. HEINLEIN's Red Planet (1949) - and, by implication, his STRANGER IN ASTRANGE LAND (1961) - Bradbury's The Martian Chronicles (fixup 1950), Mark CLIFTON's Eight Keys to Eden (1960), H. Beam PIPER's Little Fuzzy (1962), Robert SILVERBERG's Downward to the Earth (1970) and The Face of the Waters (1991), Lloyd BIGGLE Jr's Monument (1974), Cherry WILDER's Second Nature (1982), Joan SLONCZEWSKI's A Door into Ocean (1986) and Judith MOFFETT's Pennterra (1987). Ursula K. LE GUIN's The Word for World is Forest (1976) is an outstanding treatment of this theme, the sourness of the narrative reflecting the realities of the Vietnam War. Brian M. STABLEFORD's The Paradise Game (1974) and Critical Threshold (1976) areclever variations; both are about planets which are apparently Edenic but which turn out to be rather more sinister. This is also the case in Ian WATSON's "The Moon and Michelangelo" (1987), in which a pastoral aliensociety has been wholly misunderstood but offers a form of ironic transcendence nevertheless. Richard MCKENNA's "Hunter, Come Home" (1963) and John VARLEY's "In the Hall of the Martian Kings" (1977) are both good treatments of the ultimate in benign ecologies: bio-systems that enfold and preserve the sympathetic human characters against all dangers.The fourth version of sf pastoral is perhaps the commonest: the escapist adventure story set in a simpler world, whether it be the future, the past, another planet or in another continuum. If the portrayal of "Nature" is an essential element in all pastorals, then this is the version of them that prefers its Nature red in tooth and claw. Edgar Rice BURROUGHS's Tarzan of the Apes (1914) belongs here, as do his A Princess of Mars(1912; 1917), At the Earth's Core (1914; 1922) and all their various sequels. Tarzan is an archetypal 20th-century pastoral hero; his freedom of action, affinity with animals and innocent capacity for violence represent an amalgam of daydreams, Rousseau married to Darwin. One could go further and say that the whole subgenre of SWORD AND SORCERY is in a sense pastoral. As urbanization increases and free space diminishes on the Earth's surface, so the pastoral dream of simpler worlds in harmony with(or in enjoyable conflict with) Nature becomes ever more compelling.In the 1980s (there are earlier examples) pastoral themes were used by a number of WOMEN WRITERS OF SF to image the values of FEMINISM, as in Slonczewski's A Door into Ocean. The prime example here, though, is LeGuin's Always Coming Home (1985), an extraordinarily rich and dense exercise in speculative ANTHROPOLOGY, largely set in a post-holocaust pastoral culture whose values are the values of women. A cruder exercise in the same vein is Sally Miller GEARHART's The Wanderground: Stories of the Hill Women (coll of linked stories 1980), in which the women's society's embrace of Nature and the men's society's despisal of it are both so diagrammatic as to approach caricature. Sheri S. TEPPER achieves the balance in Raising the Stones (1990), with plenty of melodrama but also with plenty of real life, when she contrasts two agricultural societies on two planets, the one society patriarchal and brutal, the other deriving its strength from the realism (and, in the main, the kindliness) of women, a confrontation between the bad pastoral and the good.Pastoral has always been an attractive theme, but its simpler pleasures can pall after a time. The most interesting uses of pastoral in sf, many of which are cited above, are those in which the pastoral values have their cost, or in which the urban/pastoral or civilized/primitive oppositions are seen with some sort of irony - that is, with the recognition that life is not always as neatly dualistic as we would sometimes wish. Some of the poignant qualities of Hilbert SCHENCK's At the Eye of the Ocean (1980) and A ROSE FOR ARMAGEDDON (1982), pastorals whosepastures are the field of ocean, derive from this recognition. Behind the greatest pastorals is often a sense of loss, for Nature herself often throws up images of decline and decay as well as of growth and harvest, and to invoke Nature is to invoke a world whose benisons are ephemeral (although they will always return). This may be why some of the finestpastorals are seasonal or cyclical; Brian W. ALDISS's Helliconia trilogy (1982-5) is many other things as well, but at root it is a pastoral whoseburden is that Winter always comes.
   DP/PN

Science Fiction and Fantasy Encyclopedia. . 2011.

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  • Pastoral — Pastoral, as an adjective, refers to the lifestyle of shepherds and pastoralists, moving livestock around larger areas of land according to seasons and availability of water and feed. Pastoral also describes literature, art and music which… …   Wikipedia

  • pastoral — pastoral, ale, aux [ pastɔral, o ] adj. et n. f. • v. 1200, rare av. XVIe; lat. pastoralis, de pastor; cf. pâtre, pasteur 1 ♦ Didact. ou littér. Relatif aux pasteurs, aux bergers. La vie, les mœurs pastorales. Chant pastoral. ♢ Vieilli Qui a un… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • pastoral — PASTORÁL, Ă, pastorali, e, adj., s.f. 1. adj. De păstor, păstoresc; p. ext. de la ţară. câmpenesc, rustic. 2. adj. (Despre creaţii literare) Care zugrăveşte în mod idilic viaţa păstorilor, viaţa de la ţară; bucolic. 3. s.f. Operă literară cu… …   Dicționar Român

  • pastoral — pastoral, ale (pa sto ral, ra l ) adj. 1°   Qui appartient aux pasteurs ou bergers. Habit pastoral. Des chants pastoraux. •   Après Abraham on trouve Isaac son fils, et Jacob son petit fils, imitateurs de sa foi et de sa simplicité dans la même… …   Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré

  • Pastoral — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Según el contexto, Pastoral puede referirse a: Pastoral, la Sexta sinfonía de Ludwig van Beethoven Pastoral un dúo de rock argentino Pastoral, una obra de teatro típica de Sola en el País vasco francés Pastoral, una… …   Wikipedia Español

  • pastoral — 1. adj. Perteneciente o relativo al pastor (ǁ de ganado). Literatura, música pastoral. 2. Perteneciente o relativo al pastor (ǁ prelado). 3. Perteneciente o relativo a la poesía en que se pinta la vida de los pastores. 4. f. Especie de drama… …   Diccionario de la lengua española

  • Pastoral — Pas tor*al, a. [L. pastoralis: cf. F. pastoral. See {Pastor}.] 1. Of or pertaining to shepherds; hence, relating to rural life and scenes; as, a pastoral life. [1913 Webster] 2. Relating to the care of souls, or to the pastor of a church; as,… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • pastoral — adjetivo 1. Que refleja la vida de los pastores: poesía pastoral. 2. De los pastores de una iglesia: la vida pastoral. báculo* pastoral. carta* pastoral. visita* pastoral. sustantivo femenino 1 …   Diccionario Salamanca de la Lengua Española

  • pastoral — [pas′tərəl, päs′tərəl] adj. [ME pastoralle < L pastoralis < pastor, a shepherd: see PASTOR] 1. of shepherds or their work, way of life, etc. 2. of or portraying rural life or, formerly, a highly conventionalized form of rustic life among… …   English World dictionary

  • Pastoral — (Ницца,Франция) Категория отеля: Адрес: 27 Rue Assalit, 06000 Ницца, Франция Описа …   Каталог отелей

  • pastoral — (adj.) of or pertaining to shepherds, early 15c., from O.Fr. pastoral, from L. pastoralis, from pastor (see PASTOR (Cf. pastor) (n.)). The noun sense of poem dealing with country life generally is from 1580s. Pastorale (in the Italian form)… …   Etymology dictionary

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