Transcript Slide 1

Guest Lecture by Lydia Balian
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Neuromancer is a science fiction novel
In the year it was published, Neuromancer won
the Nebula, the Hugo, and the Philip K. Dick
awards in science fiction
Has been translated into numerous languages,
including Magyar, Japanese, and Danish
Spawned an entire subgenre of science fiction:
Cyberpunk
But who is William Gibson and what exactly is
science fiction?
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Brief Biography
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Born 1948
Moved to Vancouver, British Columbia at 19 to
avoid the draft for the Vietnam War
Became interested in Sci-Fi literature while working
on a degree in English at the University of British
Columbia
Published two short stories, “Johnny Mnemonic”
and “Burning Chrome” before publishing his first
novel, Neuromancer, in 1984 to popular and critical
acclaim
Books by William Gibson: Official Website (1, 2)
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Science fiction is notoriously difficult to define
Numerous sub-genres, such as fantasy or horror
General characteristics include:
Speculation based on current science or technology
 Setting in the future or alternate reality
 Setting in outer space
 Discovery or application of new or futuristic scientific
principles, i.e. time travel, nanotechnology, cyborgs,
robots, etc.
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 Molly’s retractable nails (24-25) and other cyborg
enhancements
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Pulp Publishing
Named for the cheap wood pulp paper it was
printed on
 Published from the 1920s-1950s
 Characteristic of most genre fiction including
detective/mystery, western, horror, fantasy/sword
and sorcery, and science fiction
 Pulp magazines often featured a variety of genres in
the same publication (example)
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 How might Neuromancer qualify as a mixing of these
genres?
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The Paperback Revolution
The paperback novel actually dates back to the early 19th
century
 Paperback publishing techniques combined with pulp
materials creates new publishing revolution
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 Book binding technique whereby pages are bound with glue
rather than stitches or staples
 Inexpensive to produce
 Audience for pulp magazines diminishes as buyers purchase
cheap books
Allowed publication of full length novels in genre fiction
 1940s-today
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Pre-Science Fiction
Classic
Golden Age
New Wave and Feminist
Cyberpunk
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Precursors to sci-fi
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Mythology
The development of science in the Age of Reason and on
through the nineteenth century
 Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein
 Edgar Allan Poe’s "The Unparalleled Adventures of one
Hans Pfaal"
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The rise of new technologies such as electricity, the
telegraph, and new forms of powered transportation,
began to influence writers such as:
 Jules Verne (Journey to the Centre of the Earth, From the Earth to
the Moon , and Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea )
 H. G. Wells (The Time Machine, The War of the Worlds)
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The phrase “scientific romance” is used in Britain during
the late 19th century to describe this kind of fiction
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Examples of classic science fiction:
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Hugo Gernsback created Amazing Stories in 1926
 Previously edited radio and electronics magazines
 Began magazine of fiction specifically for popular
science enthusiasts
 He polls readers for title of genre, with the phrase
“science fiction” chosen (other possible titles: “scientific
romance” or “scientification”)
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Characteristics:
“Space Opera”
 Artificial Intelligence and Mind/Body Split
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Examples of “Golden Age” science fiction include:
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John W. Campbell and Astounding Science Fiction
 Campbell discovers writers who will define the field of
science fiction, such as Isaac Asimov, Robert Heinlein, and
Theodore Sturgeon
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Isaac Asimov
 Foundation series and space opera
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Ray Bradbury
 Martian Chronicles
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Characteristics
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New Wave focus on “inner space”
Experimentation in form and content
70s sci-fi preoccupied with social themes such as
race, gender, and sexuality
70s sci-fi also concerned with investigating notions
of “utopia” versus “dystopia”
Examples of New Wave science fiction include:
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New Worlds, edited by Michael Moorcock
J.G. Ballard and inner space
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Characteristics:
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Examples of cyberpunk include:
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Term cyberpunk coined by Bruce Bethke in short story of the
same name in 1980
Focus on cyberspace, a term coined by Gibson in 1982
Information technology as central preoccupation
Focus on the marginalized and dispossessed (“outlaw zones,”
11 and depiction of Zion, 103-104)
Punk as worldview and writing style: disenchantment with
corporations, government corruption, surveillance technology
Gibson’s “Johnny Mnemonic,” “Gernsback Continuum,”
“Burning Chrome,” and Neuromancer
Cyberspace in Neuromancer
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“A year here and he still dreamed of cyberspace...”(4-5)
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Manovich’s new media principle of transcoding
and the effects of science fiction on society and vice
versa
Innovation and technology
Various media forms: literature, art, film (Keanu
Reeves in Johnny Mnemonic), television (Star Trek
1, 2 and Firefly 1), computer games (Neuromancer
video game)
Science fiction community
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Conventions
Clubs
Organizations
Fan fiction
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If artistic creations are a response to our life
and times, how do you think artists will
respond in the future?
Environment
 Biotechnology
 Nanotechnology
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How will science fiction continue to influence
society?
“Science Fiction.” Wikipedia, The Free
Encyclopedia. 20 May 2007
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Science_fiction
“Neuromancer.” Wikipedia, The Free
Encyclopedia. 20 May 2007
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neuromancer
Brouillette, Sarah. “Corporate Publishing and
Canonization: Neuromancer and ScienceFiction Publishing in the 1970s and Early
1980s.” Book History 5 (2002): 187-208.