Un-Man
"Un-Man" | |||
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Short story by Poul Anderson | |||
cover art by Pawelka | |||
Country | United States | ||
Language | English | ||
Genre(s) | science fiction | ||
Publication | |||
Published in | Astounding Science Fiction | ||
Publisher | Street & Smith | ||
Media type | Magazine | ||
Publication date | January 1953 | ||
Chronology | |||
Series | The Psychotechnic League | ||
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"Un-Man" is a science fiction novella by American writer Poul Anderson, first published in the January 1953 issue of Astounding Science Fiction. It was included in the 1962 collection Un-Man and Other Novellas, and the 1981 collection The Psychotechnic League. As a component of the Psychotechnic League future history, "Un-Man" takes place in the year 2004, between "Marius" and "The Sensitive Man".
Plot summary
The story is set at a time after a devastating World War III in 1958, with the world gradually recovering from the devastation. (Chicago is mentioned as having been totally destroyed and there is no intention of rebuilding it; rather, the plan is to totally raze the ruins and use the land for agriculture - pending which, the vast abandoned ruins are being used for all kinds of nefarious activities). The United Nations, re-founded after the war and much stronger than in its earlier incarnation, is in the process of making itself a true World Government. Politics in all countries - including the US - are polarized between "Pro-UN" parties seeking to integrate in this now global framework and "Anti-UN" ones promoting nationalism and sovereignty and sometimes resorting to violence in resisting the UN. The story is strongly partisan, the United Nations protagonists being the clear Good Guys while the Nationalists opposing them are very much the Baddies. Anderson later on considerably changed his political positions and regarded this earlier embrace of the UN as part of Liberal views that he had outgrown.
Robert Naysmith is a member of the United Nations Inspectorate, an international police force that neutralizes threats to world peace. He is also a member of the Rostomily Brotherhood, a secret order within the Inspectorate made up of men cloned from Stefan Rostomily, a member of the French resistance during World War III.
Naysmith is ordered to carry on the assignment of Martin Donner, another member of the Brotherhood who was killed while investigating an anti-UN conspiracy. Atypically for a Brother, Donner had a wife and child, and Naysmith's first task is to impersonate Donner long enough to persuade his family to go into hiding with him. Naysmith leaves Donner's wife and son in an isolated cabin in the Canadian Rockies. He then kidnaps and drugs a member of the conspiracy, learning that he has been assigned to assassinate Barney Rosenberg, a Martian colonist who is returning to Earth to retire. Naysmith teams up with a Finnish Brother named Juho Lampi to rescue Rosenberg, and learns that he was a close friend of the original Rostomily.
After leaving Rosenberg with the Donners, Naysmith and his partner arrange to be captured by the conspiracy. They are brought to the secret sea base of Arnold Besser, UN Minister of International Finance and the leader of the conspiracy. They find themselves joined by two more captive Brothers, along with Besser himself. Before Besser can begin torturing Naysmith and the others, the secret base is attacked by UN police, and Besser's bodyguard (actually another Brother, surgically altered to look like Besser's bodyguard) kills Besser and frees the others. Following the raid, the information found in Besser's secret base allows the UN to roll up the conspiracy. Donner's wife tracks down Naysmith and asks him to marry her.
The story is unusual among Anderson's writings in featuring a particularly hideous and disgusting cast of villains, having no redeeming qualities whatsoever - while in most Anderson writings, the Antagonists are at least a bit sympathetic and given their own honor and their comprehensible reasons to act as they do. Later, in "The Sensitive Man" Anderson took up many of the themes of "Un-Man", but substituting one of his usual nuanced Antagonists.
Reception
In 2003, "Un-Man" was nominated for the 1954 Retro-Hugo Award for Best Novella.[1] Locus's Rich Horton called it "interesting";[2] however, Evelyn Leeper found it "fairly basic" and "much less appealing and more strident than [Anderson's] non-political [writing]", while noting that the title is a pun ("un-" is both a privative — referring to Naysmith being a clone — and a reference to the UN).[3]
References
- ^ 1954 Retro-Hugo Awards, at TheHugoAwards.org; retrieved April 12, 2017
- ^ The Best Science Fiction of 1953: A Look a Potential Retro Hugos, by Rich Horton, in Locus, published February 20, 2004; retrieved April 12, 2017
- ^ This Week's Reading: Un-Man, by Evelyn Leeper, originally published in MT VOID, July 2, 2004; retrieved April 12, 2017
External links
- Un-Man title listing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- Un-man and Other Novellas
- v
- t
- e
- Earthman's Burden
- Star Prince Charlie
- Hoka!
- Star Ways
- The Snows of Ganymede
- Virgin Planet
- The Psychotechnic League
- Cold Victory
- Starship
Polesotechnic League period of Nicholas van Rijn |
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Terran Empire period of Dominic Flandry |
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- Orbit Unlimited
- New America
- Maurai and Kith
- Orion Shall Rise
- Flight to Forever
- Vault of the Ages
- Brain Wave
- Question and Answer
- No World of Their Own
- The Long Way Home
- Perish by the Sword
- War of Two Worlds
- The Enemy Stars
- The High Crusade
- Murder in Black Letter
- Twilight World
- After Doomsday
- The Makeshift Rocket
- Murder Bound
- Shield
- Three Worlds to Conquer
- The Corridors of Time
- The Star Fox
- The Fox, the Dog and the Griffin: A Folk Tale Adapted from the Danish of C. Molbeck
- World Without Stars
- Tau Zero
- The Byworlder
- The Dancer from Atlantis
- There Will Be Time
- Fire Time
- Inheritors of Earth
- The Winter of the World
- The Avatar
- The Demnon of Scattery
- The Devil's Game
- The Boat of a Million Years
- The Saturn Game
- The Longest Voyage
- War of the Gods
- Starfarers
- Genesis
- Mother of Kings
- For Love and Glory
- Strangers from Earth
- Un-Man and Other Novellas
- Time and Stars
- The Horn of Time
- Beyond the Beyond
- Seven Conquest
- Tales of the Flying Mountains
- The Queen of Air and Darkness and Other Stories
- The Worlds of Poul Anderson
- The Many Worlds of Poul Anderson
- Homeward and Beyond
- The Best of Poul Anderson
- Homebrew
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- The Night Face & Other Stories
- The Dark Between the Stars
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- Dialogue With Darkness
- Space Folk
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- The Armies of Elfland
- Inconstant Star
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- All One Universe
- Going for Infinity
- Swordsmen from the Stars
- Operation Chaos
- Operation Luna
- Three Hearts and Three Lions
- The Broken Sword
- Hrolf Kraki's Saga
- A Midsummer Tempest
- The Merman's Children
- Conan the Rebel
- War of the Gods
- The Golden Slave
- Rogue Sword
- Mother of Kings
- "Brake"
- "Call Me Joe"
- "Delenda Est"
- "Entity"
- "Eutopia"
- "Goat Song"
- "The Light"
- "The Longest Voyage"
- "The Man Who Came Early"
- "Marius"
- "Memory"
- "Night Piece"
- "No Truce with Kings"
- "The Pirate"
- "The Queen of Air and Darkness"
- "Quest"
- "Sam Hall"
- "The Saturn Game"
- "The Sensitive Man"
- "The Sharing of Flesh"
- "Un-Man"