As an undergrad, I took a Science Fiction class from a completely awesome professor who would allow his mind to be blown repeatedly in front of the class while he taught us books like Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep, 2001: A Space Odessy, and Paradise Lost. "Ahhhh!!!!" he's say, " I know nothing man! These guys are thinking of stuff NO ONE HAS EVER THOUGHT OF BEFORE! They are imagining new ways of thinking, and technology that does not exist yet. They are making forecasts and predictions, and some of them are coming true." (Not a direct quote, but pretty close :) ).
So, yeah, Science Fiction is my bag. If a good meaty sci fi novel comes my way I dig my teeth into it like nothing else, and try and pinpoint the spots where the author is imagining things no one has ever thought of before.
In "The Naked Sun" I was blown away, not by Asimov's excellent discussion of robots, but by his discussion of "trimensional images" and the difference between "viewing" and "seeing".
Okay, so in Asimov's time, there were obviously such things as movies and television. But Asimov envisioned a society where EVERY form of communication was carried out by viewing people through trimensional images; in fact people in the novel from the planet Solaria had nervous breakdowns when they SAW people as opposed to VIEWING them.
Instantly my mind jumped to the metaphorical cyborg, a person comfortable with themselves when viewed or characterized through media. And I thought of webcams. We may not have perfected 3-D imaging without a screen yet, but many people view others on the computer while being hundreds of miles away from them.
Asimov's Solaria is a bit of a dystopia in the sense that it is an insular society where physical contact is distasteful. But so far in our society, "viewing" is more of a positive thing, it connects families who haven't seen each other in a while.
And later, when I was reading an article about how baby sonograms are shaping the way both moms and physicians think about healthcare and their unborn babies, I came across this passage:
"The real time fetus is a social fetus, available for public viewing and commentary at a much earlier stage than the moment of quickening, which used to stand for its entry into the world beyond the mother's belly." (Rapp 38)
All right, so I'm a mom, so my view here is a little biased (I do agree with the rest of the article, that it may cause the baby-to-be to be institutionalized a little early), but I love this idea that even before it's born, the fetus of the child becomes a social being to the parents. When I saw my son on the sonogram for the first time he was sucking his thumb, and from that point on he's always been a little busy beaver to me.
Maternal gushing aside, I think that the important thought behind all this is that in our society today, viewing is still a mostly positive thing. We don't necessarily use it to the detriment of our personal relationships, but to enhance the ones we already have and form new ones with people we may not have known otherwise. We can even use it to "view" a person who hasn't been born yet.
But can we keep the boundaries this clear cut? I can kind of imagine a time in the future where viewing and seeing becomes almost interchangeable; when you're walking down the street, brace yourself to bump into someone and then walk through them instead. Even that's not strictly a dystopian view though, interchanging viewing with seeing still means seeing. I suppose the dystopian bit of it would only happen if viewing became dominant. Or maybe it wouldn't be necessarily dystopian, but sterile, and sterility seems somewhat boring to me...
Maybe I should just stop labeling :).
Asimov, Isaac. The Naked Sun. Bantam Books: New York, 1965.
Rapp, Rayna. Real Time Fetus. Cyborgs and Citadels. Ed. Gary Lee Downey and Joseph Dumit. School of American Research: Santa Fe, 1997.
I think the problem I was having at the end of the post is the whole "social is good" vs "introverted is bad" argument. Phoo on that. I've come to terms with the fact I'm introverted a long time ago, and it hasn't damaged me. In that sense, a society that is a little introverted and isolated wouldn't be a dystopia unless it was taken to the extreme it is in Asimov's novel. As Baley says at the end, the solution is somewhere in between the overly social and the overly introverted. We're at a good mix as a society right now, I think.
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