Confronting Dystopia: The Power of Cognition in Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash and the Diamond Age

IF 0.2 3区 文学 0 LITERATURE EXTRAPOLATION Pub Date : 2017-04-01 DOI:10.3828/EXTR.2017.4
J. Lewis
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Recuperating Dystopia-Thinking Big Among the RuinsRuined cities, broken institutions, and ecological, technological, political, and economic collapses mark nearly all texts labeled "dystopic fiction." While the term dystopia is relatively unstable and fluid, the literal translation from the Greek as "not-good-place" is a useful start. For this essay, I will define dystopic fiction as any text that depicts the lead-up-to and/or after-effects of global cataclysms or the onset of totalitarianism in such a way as to offer little or no hope for humanity's short- or long-term survival. Examples of such dystopic texts that foster or advance such a definition include George Orwell's 1984 (1948), Philip K. Dick's Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep (DADoES 1968), and Cormac McCarthy's The Road (2006). Although one could argue that both Orwell and McCarthy offer the slightest of hopes that Oceania's citizens will, one day, revolt against Big Brother and/or that the Boy will find solace with the stranger he meets after his father's death, neither outcome is in any way assured. And, certainly, few would want to visit Orwell's "Oceania," Dick's Los Angeles, or McCarthy's American wasteland as these are certainly "not-good-places," but dystopic fictions often go further to reveal futures we may well be creating today through disastrous environmental policies, continued threats of global thermonuclear or biological warfare, and the expansion of cybernetic technologies into the sentient.Neal Stephenson's novels, from The Big U (1984) to Seveneves (2015), are often labeled "dystopic" because they do often feature these kinds of calamities, but such marketing offers little use-value for understanding his significant contributions to contemporary science fiction. Stephenson's novels and public statements break with this loose definition of the dystopic at nearly every turn by offering scenarios where human creativity and cognition offer real hope against such potential disasters. As Fredric Jameson articulates in Archaeologies of the Future (2005), Snow Crash (1992) and The Diamond Age (1994) are better termed "anti-Utopias" as they reject what Jameson calls "grand Utopian idea of wish-the abolition of property, the complementarity of desires, non-alienated labor, the equality of the sexes" (145). Instead, Stephenson's early works often privilege such values as the accumulation of private property, unfettered capitalism, Victorian colonialism, and often rigidly defined gender roles, but both novels ultimately suggest that non-alienated labor, especially creative engineering and design work, is a potential salvation.Because his breakthrough novel Snow Crash details an America divided between those living in storage units and those who can afford to hide themselves inside privately secured housing developments controlled by oftenracist "Franchise-Organized Quasi-National Enterprises" or "FOQNEs," it is easy to see why readers, critics, and booksellers group it with 1984, DADoES, and other works that forecast the end of liberal democracies. However, Snow Crash ends with the computer hackers triumphant against the despotic forces that would enslave them. Despite similarly apocalyptic settings in Stephenson's other works, including a grossly polluted Boston in Zodiac (1988); a Shanghai divided into magisterial, terraformed properties of delight and wonder for the rich and powerful and miserable slums in The Diamond Age; and the doomed surface of the Earth after the Moon's sudden destruction in Seveneves, Snow Crash resists classification as a dystopia. Truly, each of Stephenson's settings is either the result of a societal system crash that has destroyed the economic, political, social, and other institutions or one in which the present is careering towards such a crash that may or may not come to pass in the novel. But in each work, his protagonists build a cognitive response to ameliorate the present discomforts or prevent, take advantage of, or simply try to survive an impending catastrophe. …
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直面反乌托邦:尼尔·斯蒂芬森《雪崩与钻石时代》中的认知力量
在废墟中重新审视反乌托邦思维废墟中的城市、破碎的制度以及生态、技术、政治和经济崩溃几乎标志着所有被贴上“反乌托邦小说”标签的文本。虽然反乌托邦一词相对不稳定和不稳定,但从希腊语直译为“不好的地方”是一个有用的开始。在这篇文章中,我将把反乌托邦小说定义为任何描述全球灾难或极权主义爆发前后影响的文本,这些文本对人类的短期或长期生存几乎没有希望。促成或推进这种定义的反乌托邦文本的例子包括乔治·奥威尔的《1984》(1948年)、菲利普·K·迪克的《做电绵羊的机器人梦》(DADoES 1968年)和科马克·麦卡锡的《路》(2006年)。尽管有人可能会说,奥威尔和麦卡锡都希望大洋洲的公民有一天会反抗老大哥,和/或男孩会在父亲去世后遇到的陌生人那里找到安慰,但这两种结果都无法确定。当然,很少有人愿意参观奥威尔的“大洋洲”、迪克的洛杉矶或麦卡锡的美国荒原,因为这些地方肯定“不是好地方”,但反乌托邦小说往往更进一步地揭示了我们今天很可能通过灾难性的环境政策、全球热核或生物战的持续威胁、,以及控制论技术向感知者的扩展。尼尔·斯蒂芬森的小说,从《大U》(1984)到《Seveneves》(2015),经常被贴上“反乌托邦”的标签,因为它们经常以这类灾难为特色,但这种营销对理解他对当代科幻小说的重大贡献几乎没有用价值。斯蒂芬森的小说和公开声明几乎在每一个转折点都打破了对反乌托邦的松散定义,提供了人类创造力和认知为抵御此类潜在灾难提供真正希望的场景。正如弗雷德里克·詹姆森在《未来考古》(2005)中所阐述的那样,《雪崩》(1992)和《钻石时代》(1994)被更好地称为“反乌托邦”,因为它们拒绝了詹姆森所说的“希望废除财产、欲望互补、非异化劳动、两性平等的伟大乌托邦思想”(145)。相反,斯蒂芬森的早期作品往往优先考虑私人财产的积累、不受约束的资本主义、维多利亚殖民主义以及通常严格定义的性别角色等价值观,但这两部小说最终都表明,非异化劳动,尤其是创意工程和设计工作,是一种潜在的救赎。因为他的突破性小说《雪崩》详细描述了一个美国,既有住在储藏室里的人,也有能够躲在由经常带有种族主义色彩的“特许经营组织的准国家企业”或“FOQNE”控制的私人安全住房开发区里的人,以及其他预测自由民主制度终结的著作。然而,《雪崩》以电脑黑客战胜了奴役他们的专制势力而告终。尽管斯蒂芬森的其他作品中也有类似的启示录背景,包括《十二生肖》(1988)中严重污染的波士顿;一个上海,被划分为钻石时代富有、强大和悲惨的贫民窟的权威性、地形化的欢乐和奇迹;以及月球在70年代突然毁灭后注定要毁灭的地球表面,Snow Crash拒绝被归类为反乌托邦。诚然,斯蒂芬森的每一个场景要么是摧毁了经济、政治、社会和其他机构的社会制度崩溃的结果,要么是当下正朝着小说中可能发生也可能不会发生的崩溃狂奔。但在每一部作品中,他的主人公都会建立一种认知反应,以缓解目前的不适,或预防、利用或只是试图在即将到来的灾难中幸存下来…
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EXTRAPOLATION
EXTRAPOLATION LITERATURE-
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33.30%
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8
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