The Gernsback Continuum - William Gibson

The accompanying image just may depict the near future of the Gernsback inhabitants. Let's have some sympathy, people.
Image courtesy of Frank Wu's Frank R. Paul Gallery (www.frankwu.com/paul1.html)
"Amazing Stories" Jan. 1928
It has come to my attention that the auto-CC interprets "foreign wars" as "foreign Moors." This is unfortunate but all too predictable.
RIP Jerry Lewis
oi an' 'ows me brit'ish accent den? Adam Curtis innit?

Пікірлер: 8

  • @RosencrantzDead
    @RosencrantzDead4 жыл бұрын

    thanks mate. i had to read this for uni and having an audio format available really commutes the difficulty of reading when i'm not feeling it. this was a cool story and your narration was solid!

  • @josiahevaristo6092
    @josiahevaristo60923 жыл бұрын

    Man, the last few pages really got to me

  • @sirmount2636
    @sirmount26364 жыл бұрын

    Haunting.

  • @milkcandlejuice892
    @milkcandlejuice892 Жыл бұрын

    thanks a lot.

  • @TheMightyPika
    @TheMightyPika2 жыл бұрын

    "Origami trick" i see what you did there Gibson.

  • @milkcandlejuice892

    @milkcandlejuice892

    Жыл бұрын

    Sorry for being stupid, but what did he do?

  • @user-md9ok2wv6r
    @user-md9ok2wv6r11 ай бұрын

    I remember reading this in a Book by the same name. Your reading agrees with my Brain's remembering in "The Gernsback Continuum" 1981 I was born in 1949 and started reading Andre Norton and Robert Heinlein in 1959. I am a Science Fiction NUT-CASE! Everything Is Nice Beating the nice nice nice thing to death (with fluffy pillows) ‘The Gernsback Continuum’ by William Gibson But this story led the way. It was a cooly accurate perception of the wrongheaded elements of the past - and a clarion call for a new SF estethtic of the Eighties. That from the Sterling’s brief introduction to ‘The Gernsback Continuum’ which also notes that it is Gibson’s first professional publication. This is surprising not just for its immediate quality and Gibson’s already distinctive sensibility but because it much more closely resembles his current work, rather than what I think of when I think of his early cyberpunk period. It is set in the present (which is to say the Eighties), can be read as entirely mimetic and features none of the trappings we would usually associate with cyberpunk. Gibson may have become stylistically more oblique but the protagonist of this story wouldn’t seem out of place in Pattern Recognition: I’d gone over to shoot a series of shoe ads; California girls with tanned legs and frisky Day-Glo jogging shoes had capered for me down the escalators of St. John’s Wood and across the platforms of Tooting Bec. The photographer is commissioned to gather images for a coffee table book of “American Streamlined Moderne”, real world examples of the sort of architecture Paul R Frank drew for Hugo Gernsback. Gradually this never was world of fluted chrome and aluminium starts to impinge on his reality. In terms of linking the story to anything Sterling identifies in his preface, that internationality is there from the beginning but otherwise it is hard to spot the nascent germ of cyberpunk. Rather this seems like an instinctively Ballardian story, albeit seen through the lens of a fresh generation. It is all there: architecture, 20th Century American history, invisible literature, commodity fetishism, alienation. As I said though, Gibson’s own sensibility shines through. To start with, he is a rather more open writer (although this has changed as his career has progress); a Ballard protagonist would never come out and refer to “my little bundle of condensed catastrophe”. There is more to it than that though. A line like “really bad media can exorcise your semiotic ghosts” makes you sit up and take notice. It is distinctly Ballardian but already distinctly Gibsonian. Really quite wonderful.

  • @cajunmane7272
    @cajunmane7272 Жыл бұрын

    I still don't get it