Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Literary Speculation

Because there was no real definition for the characters except for the eponymous 8 year-old child porn star, I have decided to draw a pigoon. This is based on someone else's design, but was fun to draw.

A story that takes until the very end to unfold completely, this is possibly my second favorite book in the list, right behind A Wild Sheep Chase. The pacing is such that one man, Snowman, is living in the present. He's introduced as a prophet to a bizarre group of perfectly beautiful people, and he says he may or may not be the last living human. But more importantly, he was once Jimmy. This is more-or-less Jimmy's story, with Oryx and Crake being very prominent people in his development. When all is said and done, this is a story about the dangers of corporations and the blindness of eugenics.

Jimmy's father is the first person in his life to show an abandonment towards Jimmy, favoring his bio-engineering over his son's happiness. As his company, as well as his rivals, continue to genetically modify animals for any number of reasons, or develop medicines and drugs for a mass, or do whatever they must do the change the world, Jimmy finds himself estranged and somewhat evasive of it all. He ends up in college and becomes sexually active, and sexually unsatisfied, though he does get women who take pity on him. He is increasingly more lost in a world he doesn't quite understand; a theme that is only ever expanded on from the get-go. While the world goes on to do things (such as effectively poisoning and eradicating itself), he is merely lucky in his escape of danger. His only moment of feeling whole, apart from the brief period in his life of having owned a pet rakunk, was the even briefer period where he was finally with the girl he's loved since his teenage years. He is the manifestation of ignorance and jealousy, with his saving grace being his love of the English language. Oryx is in a lot of ways the spirit of acceptance and thankfulness, and Crake is the heart of greed and power-thirst. In many ways, the ultimate representations of yin, yang, and wuji (the space between both, being Jimmy). With this broad concept of gray area, Jimmy makes a very appropriate candidate to look after the new world, though it's clear he resents it.

On the note of the world Snowman inhabits, I feel it's important to analyze the residents. They are in many ways themselves devoid of yin and yang rules, always adhering to a specific code, what is inherent in their programming. They have no need to learn anything, and without Jimmy's presence, they probably wouldn't. Though... his presence seems to create some sort of religious open-mindedness as when they start building an idol in his likeness (or perhaps it is just an innocent detail). If it's not, you might question if the people who survive by routine and schedule could be open to changes like organizations (and how ironic that their creator would shield them from just that). One must wonder if they really are a superior species if they're susceptible to, as they say, the same ol' shit we are. They could just be stupid, though they're not fooled by their sex drives, nor do they see the need for education beyond Jimmy. I suppose the entire book is one big question of ethics. When must we draw the line? Should we? And in fact, will we?

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Diverse Position Science Fiction

Pictured is Akin, who looked quite cool on the cover of the second book in the Xenogenesis series. I have regrettably only read through Dawn.

This book starts up at the beginning of the end of man. Ambiguity quickly turns into fear as our protagonist Lilith learns she has been asleep for many, many years, and that the fall of man is old news. It chronicles her steady struggle with acceptance of the life she's been thrusted into, including the decisions she is ultimately not allowed to make, as well as the facts she's not supposed to know (in particular, the briefly evaded subjects of where all the books of the Earth went), despite the promise of being a non-biased group of creatures. She is modified through diet and slight experimentation to live longer and healthier, much to her chagrin. She is treated as she recalls humans having treated animals, though there is some obvious respect given to her by the Oankali, she is being tested for her survival and sexual aptitude through a majority of the pages. While she is initially defiant, she soon becomes reluctant and, eventually, accepting of her fate.

Of course, one of the most interesting themes in this book is the third sex present in the alien race; a genderless role by the name ooloi. Their general purpose is to gather DNA and expand the race, making it perhaps more perfect, perhaps just less the same. It is what their species must do, just as humans have the instinctual drive to reproduce, a fact the aliens take advantage of in their own way. The ooloi gender is one without bias, and represents the potentials of genetic evolution, even for humans, who do eventually sacrifice their own unique encoding in favor of long-term survival, something that isn't surprising by the time it becomes the only option. The hint here is that we are not done evolving, that we are still wrapped up in hating and bombing one another, and that we condition the environment to suit us. When the Oankali come, the structure of human existence is quickly changed, having the survivors live in the new environment around them, and opening up the idea of genetic growth once again, just as animals must change to survive in new environments. Once this happens, Butler has given her interpretation of what potential we might have. Her big message seems to be that if we want to continue evolving, we must seize war and development and instead let nature be our guiding factor. She seems equally interested in the development of proper relationships with those around us; the first time she meets a human in this new world, it's not terribly unlike how she felt when she first met the new alien race, though the human was legitimately more of a threat. This is perhaps a commentary on our naivety in fearing the unknown, and how this is holding us back from advancement. She is told to embrace, and yet she must ease into it. If she didn't, I suppose there wouldn't be a second book. Or a trilogy of books.

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Cyberpunk

I was pretty excited when this book popped up on the reading list. It's one my father must have loved reading, as I've heard him mention the name Hiro Protagonist a number of times when I was younger (knowing I enjoyed puns and himself being a science fiction nerd). Reading through this, more than anything, I think I enjoyed the vulgar edge to the otherwise very intelligent writing. The way this story was told was really unlike any other writing I've ever gone through. Everything was so unbelievably chaotic. There was a surprising depth of detail and history relating to this bizarre drug, as well as in the very bizarre realities Hiro exists in. While it's not a particularly believable future (not the physical world, anyway) much of this text is rooted in early pretenses about where the digital age would take us, when it was written ~18 years ago. Years later, we do have things either coincidentally like this world, or perhaps (more likely) inspired by this tale. I was immediately reminded of that odd game Second Life that emerged a few years ago, and I have a feeling that if anyone could develop a drug that affected people both in the internet (or metaverse) and in the physical world, that people would probably take it. We are brinking on this concept, though I'm sure there won't be as much interesting history once we're finally there.

In many ways, through the depth of the text, this is spiritually related to Babel-17, in that the Snow Crash virus is related to Sumerian speech, the binary language of the world, wherein both it and this virus are able to spread and infect in a very primitive, all-purpose sort of way. As with Babel-17, this language is itself a virus. It all goes back to code, to binary. In his writing this concept, Stephenson pays very close attention to this place he's created, developing an important hierarchy within the game itself, as well as a functioning tangential narrative for each and every character. Hiro follows a very strange, compelling life in the metaverse as the world's greatest sword fighter, something that greatly assisted his character in overcoming the Snow Crash virus. His concepts of being who you want to be, look as you want to look, and otherwise do what you want to do on the internet have likely given light to the way the internet itself has developed (I read that this book was in fact very influential) and is a likely indicator at what is sure to come. He questions the importance of the real world through out most of this novel, ignoring it almost completely and blurring the lines between the real, the perceived, the necessary, and most importantly, the future. Will we be communicating in this digital place while the world around us falls apart as it's hinted to have done in this book? Will we even care? In all curiousness, do we even care now? As people fall victim to the online games in so many ways including major addictions, many lives have already been changed dramatically. I can bet Stephenson is not surprised one bit.