'Reading "The Caryatids" by Bruce Sterling'

‘The novel is an insightful extrapolation of our present: the description of the faction (through each character in the 3 chapters) is a good example of how todays trends could evolve in the mid-term. We have networked-participative-ecofriendly Acquis, futile-wired-greedy Dispensation and Nation-State China who all have their own approaches to see the world. After Distraction and its “Moderators versus Regulators” factions, Sterling keeps exploring social and political differences of the near future. Like a foresight research report with a 3-scenarios structure, the book offer different visions of how tackling today’s world problems can be achieved through differently. Of course, these 3 responses correspond to existing forces at play nowadays.’

— Nicolas Nova, ‘Reading “The Caryatids” by Bruce Sterling’, Pasta&Vinegar, 07/06/2009

'Cyberpunk in the Nineties'

‘Cyberpunk was a voice of Bohemia - Bohemia in the 1980’s. The technosocial changes loose in contemporary society were bound to affect its counterculture. Cyberpunk was the literary incarnation of this phenomenon. And the phenomenon is still growing. Communication technologies in particular are becoming much less respectable, much more volatile, and increasingly in the hands of people you might not introduce to your grandma.

But today, it must be admitted that the cyberpunks - SF veterans in or near their forties, patiently refining their craft and cashing their royalty checks - are no longer a Bohemian underground. This too is an old story in Bohemia; it is the standard punishment for success. An underground in the light of day is a contradiction in terms. Respectability does not merely beckon; it actively envelops. And in this sense, “cyberpunk” is even deader than Shiner admits.

Time and chance have been kind to the cyberpunks, but they themselves have changed with the years. A core doctrine in Movement theory was “visionary intensity.” But it has been some time since any cyberpunk wrote a truly mind-blowing story, something that writhed, heaved, howled, hallucinated and shattered the furniture. In the latest work of these veterans, we see tighter plotting, better characters, finer prose, much “serious and insightful futurism.” But we also see much less in the way of spontaneous back-flips and crazed dancing on tables. The settings come closer and closer to the present day, losing the baroque curlicues of unleased fantasy: the issues at stake become something horribly akin to the standard concerns of middle-aged responsibility. And this may be splendid, but it is not war. This vital aspect of science fiction has been abdicated, and is open for the taking. Cyberpunk is simply not there any more.’

— Bruce Sterling, 1991, ‘Cyberpunk in the Nineties’, Interzone 48, pp. 39-42

'Notes for a Projected Science Fiction Novel'

‘… Lemme know if you can think of more of these. Especially something that could plausibly replace the Westphalian system, somewhere in the 21st century, without anybody much noticing.’

— Bruce Sterling, Beyond the Beyond, 09/03/2008

[With hindsight, we can presume that this was part of Bruce’s research for The Caryatids - a moment that is interesting to contrast with his experience of an acceleration & thinning (?) of the writing process.]

Bruce Sterling, The Caryatids (2009)

Bruce Sterling, The Caryatids (2009)

'Icon Minds: Design Fiction'

‘If you were a science fiction writer and you were reading, say, Scientific American you would have at least an 18-month lead over the general population in which you could write a story about something in a laboratory and it would appear in a pulp magazine and people would read it and they would be surprised by it because they’d never heard of it. That is not possible [any more], the sluggishness that allowed that particular set of reactions is just not there. I mean now if I blog something that’s going on in somebody’s lab I’m going to get an email from the guy: “Ah, Mr Sterling, thank you for putting my photon experiment on wired.com, would you like to meet my photon friends? I see you’re in London today, how about dropping by the pub.” This is a small foretaste of the kind of trouble we’re getting into.’

— Bruce Sterling, Icon 078, Dec 2009

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Notes for an MA dissertation on contemporary science fiction and the technoculture.

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