Short story about an asteroid colony where the plumber is an unclean/outcast

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It's a short story that I read in a book at some point in the 1990's. It was the French translation, so it might have been older. I believe it was a short story by Isaac Asimov, set in the early days of the Galactic Empire from Foundation, but I may be wrong.



The story had someone sent to visit an asteroid colony, might have been a mining colony, for some reason. The visitor is a sort of official and soon realizes that there's something wrong when he interacts with the local officials, and he's told the guy in charge of maintaining the plumbing is on strike.



Short explanation ensues and the visitor learns that no one in the colony would make direct contact with the plumber because he is unclean thus outcast, since he also deals with waste and the dead. Visitor offers to go negotiate on behalf of the colonists because he's not bound by their caste system, to which the colony official happily agree. The negotiations go well and the plumber resumes his work.



However, when the visitor tries to go back to the colony, he finds the way blocked and he is directed, through automated doors and voices coming out of speakers, back to his shuttle and asked to leave the colony because, since he was in contact with the plumber, he's become unclean too thus the colony officials cannot get in contact with him anymore.










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  • 1




    An excellent description. Definitely one of the better ones I've seen on the site.
    – Valorum
    2 hours ago










  • @Valorum Thank you. I try to put as much as I can remember when I ask for a story-id.
    – Sava
    1 hour ago
















up vote
3
down vote

favorite
1












It's a short story that I read in a book at some point in the 1990's. It was the French translation, so it might have been older. I believe it was a short story by Isaac Asimov, set in the early days of the Galactic Empire from Foundation, but I may be wrong.



The story had someone sent to visit an asteroid colony, might have been a mining colony, for some reason. The visitor is a sort of official and soon realizes that there's something wrong when he interacts with the local officials, and he's told the guy in charge of maintaining the plumbing is on strike.



Short explanation ensues and the visitor learns that no one in the colony would make direct contact with the plumber because he is unclean thus outcast, since he also deals with waste and the dead. Visitor offers to go negotiate on behalf of the colonists because he's not bound by their caste system, to which the colony official happily agree. The negotiations go well and the plumber resumes his work.



However, when the visitor tries to go back to the colony, he finds the way blocked and he is directed, through automated doors and voices coming out of speakers, back to his shuttle and asked to leave the colony because, since he was in contact with the plumber, he's become unclean too thus the colony officials cannot get in contact with him anymore.










share|improve this question



















  • 1




    An excellent description. Definitely one of the better ones I've seen on the site.
    – Valorum
    2 hours ago










  • @Valorum Thank you. I try to put as much as I can remember when I ask for a story-id.
    – Sava
    1 hour ago












up vote
3
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
3
down vote

favorite
1






1





It's a short story that I read in a book at some point in the 1990's. It was the French translation, so it might have been older. I believe it was a short story by Isaac Asimov, set in the early days of the Galactic Empire from Foundation, but I may be wrong.



The story had someone sent to visit an asteroid colony, might have been a mining colony, for some reason. The visitor is a sort of official and soon realizes that there's something wrong when he interacts with the local officials, and he's told the guy in charge of maintaining the plumbing is on strike.



Short explanation ensues and the visitor learns that no one in the colony would make direct contact with the plumber because he is unclean thus outcast, since he also deals with waste and the dead. Visitor offers to go negotiate on behalf of the colonists because he's not bound by their caste system, to which the colony official happily agree. The negotiations go well and the plumber resumes his work.



However, when the visitor tries to go back to the colony, he finds the way blocked and he is directed, through automated doors and voices coming out of speakers, back to his shuttle and asked to leave the colony because, since he was in contact with the plumber, he's become unclean too thus the colony officials cannot get in contact with him anymore.










share|improve this question















It's a short story that I read in a book at some point in the 1990's. It was the French translation, so it might have been older. I believe it was a short story by Isaac Asimov, set in the early days of the Galactic Empire from Foundation, but I may be wrong.



The story had someone sent to visit an asteroid colony, might have been a mining colony, for some reason. The visitor is a sort of official and soon realizes that there's something wrong when he interacts with the local officials, and he's told the guy in charge of maintaining the plumbing is on strike.



Short explanation ensues and the visitor learns that no one in the colony would make direct contact with the plumber because he is unclean thus outcast, since he also deals with waste and the dead. Visitor offers to go negotiate on behalf of the colonists because he's not bound by their caste system, to which the colony official happily agree. The negotiations go well and the plumber resumes his work.



However, when the visitor tries to go back to the colony, he finds the way blocked and he is directed, through automated doors and voices coming out of speakers, back to his shuttle and asked to leave the colony because, since he was in contact with the plumber, he's become unclean too thus the colony officials cannot get in contact with him anymore.







story-identification short-stories space






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edited 2 hours ago









TheLethalCarrot

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asked 2 hours ago









Sava

2,361838




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  • 1




    An excellent description. Definitely one of the better ones I've seen on the site.
    – Valorum
    2 hours ago










  • @Valorum Thank you. I try to put as much as I can remember when I ask for a story-id.
    – Sava
    1 hour ago












  • 1




    An excellent description. Definitely one of the better ones I've seen on the site.
    – Valorum
    2 hours ago










  • @Valorum Thank you. I try to put as much as I can remember when I ask for a story-id.
    – Sava
    1 hour ago







1




1




An excellent description. Definitely one of the better ones I've seen on the site.
– Valorum
2 hours ago




An excellent description. Definitely one of the better ones I've seen on the site.
– Valorum
2 hours ago












@Valorum Thank you. I try to put as much as I can remember when I ask for a story-id.
– Sava
1 hour ago




@Valorum Thank you. I try to put as much as I can remember when I ask for a story-id.
– Sava
1 hour ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
5
down vote



accepted










Strikebreaker by Isaac Asimov




The world in question is Elsevere, an extrasolar planetoid a hundred
miles in diameter which is home to an insular, idiosyncratic human
colony of thirty thousand people, who have inhabited the planet in all
three dimensions. A rigid caste system has developed, with each
occupation being confined to a particular set of families. A visiting
Earth sociologist, Steven Lamorak, learns that Igor Ragusnik has gone
on strike.



The Ragusnik family operates Elsevere's waste processing facility, and
over the generations, the Ragusniks have become a one-family caste of
untouchables, forbidden all contact with the rest of the colony. Igor
Ragusnik demands that his family's isolation end. Elsevere's ruling
council refuses his demands, and if the strike continues, the
planetoid's waste processing machinery will break down and every
colonist will die from disease. Although the machinery is not
difficult to operate, the taboo is so strong that no other Elseverean
will do so.



Only Lamorak is willing to speak to Ragusnik. As neither side will
give in, he reluctantly volunteers to operate the waste processing
machinery himself; as an outsider, he has no cultural compunctions
against doing so. Realizing that the ruling council can always import
a strikebreaker, Ragusnik capitulates and returns to work.



Lamorak assures Ragusnik that now that other Elseverians and the rest
of the galaxy are aware of how unhappy he is, they will eventually end
his family's isolation; Ragusnik is unimpressed. Lamorak learns that
he must leave immediately, as other Elseverians will no longer have
anything to do with him. Now that he has worked at Ragusnik's job, he
is an untouchable himself.







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    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes








    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    5
    down vote



    accepted










    Strikebreaker by Isaac Asimov




    The world in question is Elsevere, an extrasolar planetoid a hundred
    miles in diameter which is home to an insular, idiosyncratic human
    colony of thirty thousand people, who have inhabited the planet in all
    three dimensions. A rigid caste system has developed, with each
    occupation being confined to a particular set of families. A visiting
    Earth sociologist, Steven Lamorak, learns that Igor Ragusnik has gone
    on strike.



    The Ragusnik family operates Elsevere's waste processing facility, and
    over the generations, the Ragusniks have become a one-family caste of
    untouchables, forbidden all contact with the rest of the colony. Igor
    Ragusnik demands that his family's isolation end. Elsevere's ruling
    council refuses his demands, and if the strike continues, the
    planetoid's waste processing machinery will break down and every
    colonist will die from disease. Although the machinery is not
    difficult to operate, the taboo is so strong that no other Elseverean
    will do so.



    Only Lamorak is willing to speak to Ragusnik. As neither side will
    give in, he reluctantly volunteers to operate the waste processing
    machinery himself; as an outsider, he has no cultural compunctions
    against doing so. Realizing that the ruling council can always import
    a strikebreaker, Ragusnik capitulates and returns to work.



    Lamorak assures Ragusnik that now that other Elseverians and the rest
    of the galaxy are aware of how unhappy he is, they will eventually end
    his family's isolation; Ragusnik is unimpressed. Lamorak learns that
    he must leave immediately, as other Elseverians will no longer have
    anything to do with him. Now that he has worked at Ragusnik's job, he
    is an untouchable himself.







    share|improve this answer
























      up vote
      5
      down vote



      accepted










      Strikebreaker by Isaac Asimov




      The world in question is Elsevere, an extrasolar planetoid a hundred
      miles in diameter which is home to an insular, idiosyncratic human
      colony of thirty thousand people, who have inhabited the planet in all
      three dimensions. A rigid caste system has developed, with each
      occupation being confined to a particular set of families. A visiting
      Earth sociologist, Steven Lamorak, learns that Igor Ragusnik has gone
      on strike.



      The Ragusnik family operates Elsevere's waste processing facility, and
      over the generations, the Ragusniks have become a one-family caste of
      untouchables, forbidden all contact with the rest of the colony. Igor
      Ragusnik demands that his family's isolation end. Elsevere's ruling
      council refuses his demands, and if the strike continues, the
      planetoid's waste processing machinery will break down and every
      colonist will die from disease. Although the machinery is not
      difficult to operate, the taboo is so strong that no other Elseverean
      will do so.



      Only Lamorak is willing to speak to Ragusnik. As neither side will
      give in, he reluctantly volunteers to operate the waste processing
      machinery himself; as an outsider, he has no cultural compunctions
      against doing so. Realizing that the ruling council can always import
      a strikebreaker, Ragusnik capitulates and returns to work.



      Lamorak assures Ragusnik that now that other Elseverians and the rest
      of the galaxy are aware of how unhappy he is, they will eventually end
      his family's isolation; Ragusnik is unimpressed. Lamorak learns that
      he must leave immediately, as other Elseverians will no longer have
      anything to do with him. Now that he has worked at Ragusnik's job, he
      is an untouchable himself.







      share|improve this answer






















        up vote
        5
        down vote



        accepted







        up vote
        5
        down vote



        accepted






        Strikebreaker by Isaac Asimov




        The world in question is Elsevere, an extrasolar planetoid a hundred
        miles in diameter which is home to an insular, idiosyncratic human
        colony of thirty thousand people, who have inhabited the planet in all
        three dimensions. A rigid caste system has developed, with each
        occupation being confined to a particular set of families. A visiting
        Earth sociologist, Steven Lamorak, learns that Igor Ragusnik has gone
        on strike.



        The Ragusnik family operates Elsevere's waste processing facility, and
        over the generations, the Ragusniks have become a one-family caste of
        untouchables, forbidden all contact with the rest of the colony. Igor
        Ragusnik demands that his family's isolation end. Elsevere's ruling
        council refuses his demands, and if the strike continues, the
        planetoid's waste processing machinery will break down and every
        colonist will die from disease. Although the machinery is not
        difficult to operate, the taboo is so strong that no other Elseverean
        will do so.



        Only Lamorak is willing to speak to Ragusnik. As neither side will
        give in, he reluctantly volunteers to operate the waste processing
        machinery himself; as an outsider, he has no cultural compunctions
        against doing so. Realizing that the ruling council can always import
        a strikebreaker, Ragusnik capitulates and returns to work.



        Lamorak assures Ragusnik that now that other Elseverians and the rest
        of the galaxy are aware of how unhappy he is, they will eventually end
        his family's isolation; Ragusnik is unimpressed. Lamorak learns that
        he must leave immediately, as other Elseverians will no longer have
        anything to do with him. Now that he has worked at Ragusnik's job, he
        is an untouchable himself.







        share|improve this answer












        Strikebreaker by Isaac Asimov




        The world in question is Elsevere, an extrasolar planetoid a hundred
        miles in diameter which is home to an insular, idiosyncratic human
        colony of thirty thousand people, who have inhabited the planet in all
        three dimensions. A rigid caste system has developed, with each
        occupation being confined to a particular set of families. A visiting
        Earth sociologist, Steven Lamorak, learns that Igor Ragusnik has gone
        on strike.



        The Ragusnik family operates Elsevere's waste processing facility, and
        over the generations, the Ragusniks have become a one-family caste of
        untouchables, forbidden all contact with the rest of the colony. Igor
        Ragusnik demands that his family's isolation end. Elsevere's ruling
        council refuses his demands, and if the strike continues, the
        planetoid's waste processing machinery will break down and every
        colonist will die from disease. Although the machinery is not
        difficult to operate, the taboo is so strong that no other Elseverean
        will do so.



        Only Lamorak is willing to speak to Ragusnik. As neither side will
        give in, he reluctantly volunteers to operate the waste processing
        machinery himself; as an outsider, he has no cultural compunctions
        against doing so. Realizing that the ruling council can always import
        a strikebreaker, Ragusnik capitulates and returns to work.



        Lamorak assures Ragusnik that now that other Elseverians and the rest
        of the galaxy are aware of how unhappy he is, they will eventually end
        his family's isolation; Ragusnik is unimpressed. Lamorak learns that
        he must leave immediately, as other Elseverians will no longer have
        anything to do with him. Now that he has worked at Ragusnik's job, he
        is an untouchable himself.








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        answered 2 hours ago









        Valorum

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