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・ Ascendant
・ Ascendant Album
・ Ascendant Stakes
・ Ascendant subgroup
・ Ascendant Sun
・ Ascendead Master
・ Ascended master
・ Ascended Master Teachings
・ Ascendence
・ Ascendency
・ Ascendente Domino
・ Ascender
・ Ascender (climbing)
・ Ascender (typography)
・ Ascender Corporation
Ascending
・ Ascending and Descending
・ Ascending and descending (diving)
・ Ascending aorta
・ Ascending artery
・ Ascending branch of circumflex femoral artery
・ Ascending branch of lateral circumflex femoral artery
・ Ascending branch of medial circumflex femoral artery
・ Ascending chain condition
・ Ascending chain condition on principal ideals
・ Ascending cholangitis
・ Ascending colon
・ Ascending limb of loop of Henle
・ Ascending lumbar vein
・ Ascending palatine artery


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Ascending : ウィキペディア英語版
Ascending

''Ascending'' is a science fiction novel by the Canadian writer James Alan Gardner, published in 2001 by HarperCollins Publishers under its various imprints.〔HarperCollins, Avon, HarperCollins Canada, SFBC/Avon; paperback edition 2001, Eos Books.〕 It is the fifth novel in Gardner's "League of Peoples" series. It is a direct sequel to the first novel in the series, ''Expendable'', in that it picks up the dual story of Festina Ramos, Explorer turned admiral, and the transparent glass woman Oar, where the earlier novel left off.
==Comedy==
The protagonist and first-person narrator of ''Expendable'' is Festina Ramos; Oar is a secondary character who provides much of the comic relief in what is an entertaining but essentially serious novel. In ''Ascending'' the relationship is reversed: Oar is the first-person narrator while Festina plays an important but secondary role. As a result, ''Ascending'' is an overtly comic novel in a way that ''Expendable'' is not—though with a serious and even grim subtext.
The comic tone is established from the start. The opening chapter, which is titled "Wherein I Am Not Dead After All," begins this way:
:This is my story, the story of Oar. It is a wonderful story. I was in another story once,
:but it was not so wonderful, as I died in the end. That was very most sad indeed.
:But it turns out I am not such a one as stays dead forever, especially when I only
:fell eighty floors to the pavement.
(On his website, Gardner writes, "I think Oar is the funniest character I've ever written. She's a hoot." Gardner knows his work better than anyone.) 〔http://www.thinkage.on.ca/~jim/novels.html 〕
Oar participates deeply in two fundamental comic archetypes, the Fish Out of Water and the Wise Simpleton. Oar, in fact, was a fish out of water on her own planet, Melaquin; she was the last ambulatory and conscious individual on a planet of sleepers. Once she gets into outer space, among alien species (richly imagined and lushly described), her place beyond the fringe of the everyone else's mental outlook is even more extreme.
With a genetically-enhanced intelligence but the emotional maturity of a spoiled child, Oar fits into the category of Wise Simpleton, a hallmark of fairy tales and children's stories: the youngest child in the family, the humblest member of the group, who incongruously turns out to solve the key problem, resolve the plot, save the day. This combination of elements allows Gardner to craft a story and a prose style in which some of the more outrageous statements ever penned in the English language ("It seems humans have a foolish taboo against setting infants on fire") make perfect sense.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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