Mother Earth (novelette)

Mother Earth (novelette)
"Mother Earth"
Author Isaac Asimov
Country United States
Language English
Series Robot Series
Genre(s) science fiction short story
Published in Astounding Science Fiction
Publisher Street & Smith
Media type Magazine
Publication date May 1949
Preceded by "The Bicentennial Man"
Followed by "The Caves of Steel"

"Mother Earth" is a science fiction novelette by Isaac Asimov. It was written from September 1 to October 10, 1948, and published in the May 1949 issue of Astounding Science Fiction. It is considered part of the Robot Series, and was republished in Asimov's 1972 short story collection The Early Asimov.

Contents

Context within Asimov's universe

With fifty Spacer worlds led by Aurora, this tale seems to bridge the gap between the early robot stories and The Caves of Steel. Aurora is also described as having begun as a "Sirian sector colony", pointing to the later Galactic Empire. No individual robots appear, but positronic robots are part of the background.

However, the short-story ending does not seem consistent with situation in The Caves of Steel. The reader might view it as a "first draft" of sorts, with ideas that were later changed. Asimov would re-shuffle ideas at times — the short story Victory Unintentional has a non-human civilisation on Jupiter, which is incompatible, even though the story features positronic robots obeying the Three Laws. In Mother Earth, the latest of the Spacer worlds is Hesperus, settled from Faunus, although this does not necessarily contradict the history of Solaria provided in The Naked Sun — at one point in the story itself, the number of Spacer worlds is literally given as "some fifty worlds," not a firm, even fifty. The problem can be easily reconciled by supposing that at the period depicted in the later novels, Solaria had only recently (as in the past few centuries) been settled by mankind. This in fact would seem to be the case according to later books as Solaria was said to have been founded as a colony of one of the pre-existing spacer worlds not by colonists from Earth. Later in Foundation and Earth when the protagonists find the remnants of Aurora they find a memorial to the spacer worlds consisting of seven columns each with the names of seven spacer worlds carved into them (which would make 49 worlds), except for the last column where it was clear that an eighth planet, Solaria had been added after the fact.

Asimov himself is ambiguous about the link, saying:

What interests me most about "Mother Earth" is that it seems to show clear premonitions of the novels Caves of Steel and The Naked Sun, which I was to write in the 1950s."[1]

Themes

A major theme of the story is the way in which the Spacers have closed their thinly-populated worlds to Earth's crowded inhabitants. This was not an abstraction to Isaac Asimov, who was born in the village of Petrovichi in Smolensk Oblast, Russia. When he was three, his parents were able to emigrate to the USA, shortly before severe restrictions were placed on the immigration of Russian and East European Jews. He did not forget the link, and in fact remained fluent in Yiddish as well as English 2.

Plot summary

Earth faces a confrontation with its colonies, the "Outer Worlds." A historian looks back and sees the problem beginning a century-and-a-half earlier, when Aurora got permission to "introduce positronic robots into their community life." No date is given, but fifty years before the story starts, the Outer Worlds established an immigration quota against incoming Terran citizens. The balance of power then tipped. Now war appears likely, and there are rumors that Earth has developed an unknown weapon, code-named the "Pacific Project."

On Aurora, there is also concern, but the Aurorans decide that the threat cannot be serious. They use authoritarian methods to suppress Ion Mereanu and his Conservatives, who wish to help Earth. They then call a gathering on Hesperus, one of the Outer Worlds, to unite them against Earth.

There is some rivalry from two other planets, Rhea and Tethys. "All three planets were identically racist, identically exclusivist. Their views on Earth were similar, and completely compatible... But Aurora was the oldest of the Outer Worlds, the most advanced, the strongest militarily... Rhea and Tethys served as a focal point for those who did not recognize Auroran leadership." But Earth unexpectedly sends a threatening message to all of the worlds, uniting them against Earth.

War follows (later termed the "Three-Week War" by historians), and Earth swiftly loses. Trade is ended — the Outer Worlds have no need of Earth's exports, which are mostly agricultural. Earthmen are not allowed to journey beyond the Solar System.

The war was planned in the expectation of defeat — that was what the "Pacific Project" was all about. This is in part to force Earth to make necessary reforms, the use of robots, hydroponic agriculture, and population control. But the Outer Worlds will also weaken and split, because their worlds are biologically ill-suited to long-term human cultures. Several consequences for Earth are predicted from the entire conflict:

We will have a century of rebuilding and revitalization, and at the end of it, we shall face an outer Galaxy which will either be dying or changed. In the first case, we will build a second Terrestrian Empire, more wisely and with greater knowledge than we did the first; one based on a strong and modernized Earth.
In the second case, we will face perhaps ten, twenty, or even all fifty Outer Worlds, each with a slightly different variety of Man. Fifty humanoid species, no longer united against us, each increasingly adapted to its own planet, each with a sufficient tendency towards atavism to love Earth, to regard it as the great and original Mother.
And racism will be dead, for variety will then be the great fact of Humanity, and not uniformity. [...] Mother Earth will finally have given birth not to merely a Terrestrian, but to a Galactic Empire.[2]

This fits with Asimov's wider themes, but is not easy to reconcile with the situation found in The Caves of Steel. Possibly the reforms failed, and the Spacers learned enough biology to remain healthy and united. But no later work says anything concrete about the matter.

See also

Book collection.jpg Novels portal

References

  1. ^ Asimov, Isaac: The Early Asimov, page 532. Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1972.
  2. ^ Asimov, Isaac: The Early Asimov, pages 531-532. Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1972.
Preceded by:
"The Bicentennial Man"
Included in:
The Early Asimov
Series:
Robot Series
Followed by:
The Caves of Steel

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