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・ The Street Singer (1937 film)
・ The Street Song
・ The Street Swingers
・ The Street That Cut Everything
・ The Street Where I Live
・ The Street with No Name
・ The Street, Lawshall
・ The Streeter
・ The Streetly Academy
・ The Streets
・ The Streets (song)
・ The Streets at Southpoint
・ The Streets discography
・ The Streets Made Me
・ The Streets of Ankh-Morpork
The Streets of Ashkelon
・ The Streets of Cairo, or the Poor Little Country Maid
・ The Streets of London (1929 film)
・ The Streets of London (1934 film)
・ The Streets of Paris
・ The Streets of San Francisco
・ The Streets of San Francisco (album)
・ The Streets of Tanasbourne
・ The Streets of Woodfield
・ The Streets, the Sounds, and the Love
・ The Streetsweeper, Vol. 1
・ The Streetsweeper, Vol. 2
・ The Strength and Agility of Insects
・ The Strength o' Ten
・ The Strength of Donald McKenzie


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The Streets of Ashkelon : ウィキペディア英語版
The Streets of Ashkelon

"The Streets of Ashkelon" is a science fiction short story by American writer Harry Harrison. It has also been published under the title "An Alien Agony."〔Aldiss, Brian (ed.)(1972): ''The Penguin Science Fiction Omnibus''. Harmondsworth, UK: Penguin Books, p. 321〕 It was first published in 1962, in Brian Aldiss's magazine ''New Worlds'' #122. The story has since been reprinted over 30 times in fourteen languages, in anthologies and also academic textbooks. Science fiction critic Paul Tomlinson, who helps run Harrison's official website, has estimated that it is Harrison's most widely published story.
Its name is a reference to a passage from the Biblical 2 Samuel 1:20, which says "proclaim it not in the streets of Ashkelon." In the original context it was a part of a story in which Hebrews were instructed to try to keep the defeat of a couple of their war heroes from their enemies' knowledge, so Harrison seems to have intended it in another sense.
Harrison wrote the story for a Judith Merril-edited anthology which was to contain original stories that all violated societal taboos in some way: ''Streets'' portrayed a heroic atheist, and a naive, foolish missionary. When Merrill's project fell through, Harrison approached other markets; however, no American publisher accepted it, and so Harrison approached British markets instead. ''Streets'' was not published by an American company until six years later.〔(''The Streets of Ashkelon'' ) at HarryHarrison.com; retrieved August 8, 2007〕
==Plot==

An atheist merchant/trader, John Garth, is the only human on an alien planet where the native Weskers, intelligent but painstakingly literal-minded amphibians, live in what seem to be utopian conditions. These Weskers have no concepts whatsoever of gods, nor religion, nor sin. Garth has been gradually teaching them the scientific method.
One day Garth is surprised by the arrival of a missionary who is intent on proselytizing to the natives. Despite Garth's best efforts to dissuade him, even at the point of a gun, the missionary is on a one way journey to "save souls."
Weeks pass and Father Mark, the missionary, has been instructing the Weskers in catechism, a church has been constructed, and he has recently finished teaching the Weskers about the Crucifixion and Resurrection of Christ. Soon afterwards, Itin, the ostensible leader of the Weskers, approaches Garth about the problem of reconciling the empirical truth of the scientific method with the symbolic truth of revealed religion and asks him to come to the church to debate Father Mark. Once at the church, Garth, who had previously made preparations to leave the planet, sees the Bible open to an illustration and orders the missionary to come with him. Not understanding what's wrong, Father Mark refuses; but before Garth can explain, several natives seize the priest and drag him to a hill upon which is planted a cross. In accordance with what Garth taught them about the scientific method, they are experimentally testing the hypothesis that if they crucify the missionary in accordance with what he taught them about the Gospels, he will miraculously rise from the dead three days later and thereby redeem them.
Three days later, after Father Mark has been buried and the hypothesis disproved, Itin asks Garth what went wrong, and arrives at a simple truth: that the Weskers are now murderers.

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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