Gene Wolfe's The Fifth Head Of Cerberus

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Gene Wolfe’s The Fifth Head of Cerberus is comprised of three individual novellas. Each has its own respective theme; in chronological order, identity, colonization, and memory. However, the main focus will be on the first and second novellas, “The Fifth Head of Cerberus” and “A Story”. Here, the stories revolve around two characters: a mysterious individual known as Number Five and an anthropologist called John Marsch. In particular, Number Five’s character and Marsch’s research complement each other, resembling a popular notion, mimicry. Before anything else, some context is needed to understand how mimicry is portrayed in the book. The setting is two planets rotating around each other, Sainte Anne and Sainte Croix. Additionally, the earthlings …show more content…

In this context, the term is used to describe the ambivalent relationship between coloniser and colonised. It occurs when colonial discourse and ideology encourages the colonised subjects to adopt the coloniser’s ideas and values. In the novel, Wolfe addressed both individual mimicry and, by extension, cultural mimicry. By using the character of Number Five, a clone by nature and nurture of his great grandfather, Wolfe suggests how ideologically enforced mimicry is self-defeating. Although he describes the act of cloning as ‘anti-evolutionary’ in its preservation and perpetuation of static aggregations of genes, he is also critiquing those opposed to conventional reproduction and miscegenation. Through the interaction of Mr Million, Number Five’s father, and Number Five who are essentially one and the same person, Wolfe appears to be advocating hybridity, diversity, and cultural exchange by showing the stifled and stifling stasis that opposes it. For example: Maison du Chien could be seen as a metaphor for cultural isolationism. However, it could also be interpreted as a metaphor for imperialism since the act of cloning and the process of hypnopaedia are symbolic representations of colonial occupation and

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