177 lines
9.7 KiB
Plaintext
177 lines
9.7 KiB
Plaintext
$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$ CHEAP TRUTH 5 0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0
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EDITORIAL. "Exploring a 21st Century Pop Ideology"
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Guest grump Sue Denim vents her spleen on the crop of '83:
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*** MOM SAID IT WAS OKAY ***
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This year's Nebula Ballot looked like a list of stuff that Mom and
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Dad said it was okay to read. Mom and Dad really liked Connie Willis'
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"Firewatch" last year; it's about this student that gets all self-righteous
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and rebellious and everything, but it turned out Father knows best after all.
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This year Mom and Dad really like STARTIDE RISING by David Brin and
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Greg Benford's AGAINST INFINITY. STARTIDE RISING especially; I mean, this is
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the kind of writing that Mom and Dad grew up on, full of "Golly's" and
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blushes and grins. And aren't those dolphins cute? They talk in poetry that
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sounds like it came right out of READER'S DIGEST. They'd rather hear that
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somebody "muttered an oath" or came out with some made-up word like "Ifni!"
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than be told that they really said "shit" or "shove it up your ass,
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motherfucker."
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No sex, of course, or maybe just a noise in the night in somebody
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else's tent. And it has a nice moral, too -- something Mom and Dad have
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always known, though it hasn't always seemed that way these last couple of
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decades -- that WE are better than THEY are, and that's enough to pull us out
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of any trouble, particularly when THEY are slimy alien scum.
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The Benford book is scary in spots -- this Ganymede place they're
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trying to fix up seems almost REAL in places, and this terraforming isn't
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anything like the way Uncle Frank went about fixing up his cabin by the lake.
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But everything's okay, because the hero, Manuel (isn't that a foreign name?)
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is everything they would want a son of theirs to be: a perfect neutered
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little adult. He doesn't curse or masturbate or even THINK about girls.
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As for that weird alien artifact, well, if we can't understand it, we
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can always try and kill it. That seems like a good level-headed approach.
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Mom and Dad like Kim Stanley Robinson's "Black Air" for novelette.
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It's so nice to read a straightforward historical story, like that Frank G.
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Slaughter used to write, and it's just too bad he had to tack on that fantasy
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mumbo jumbo at the end just so he could sell it. But then that nice Joanna
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Russ did the same thing last year with "Souls," and isn't it nice that she's
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not mad any more and writing unpleasant books like THE FEMALE MAN?
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Mom and Dad are looking forward to the 1984 Nebulas, because they're
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sure that nice Mr. Robinson is going to be up for their favorite book so far
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this year, THE WILD SHORE. They like to see the OLD stories, and what could
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be more comfortable and familiar than living on the farm after they drop the
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Big One? Nope, nothing scary here. The hero tried to tell Mom and Dad that
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he's not a virgin, but they know better. He never seems that interested in
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sex anyway.
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Mostly they like the ending, where Henry discovers that he is a
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*WRITER*. It seems to agonize him terribly to write, but he is just so
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wonderfully sensitive. And Mom and Dad love the moral of the book, which is
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just like that Judy Garland movie: "There's no place like home."
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Maybe the people who vote for the Nebulas are still afraid of their
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Moms and Dads; maybe they're not Moms and Dads themselves. That would
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explain why they don't vote for books with real ideas and real sex and real
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language in them.
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And yes, Mom and Dad, there were still books like that being written,
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even in 1983. John Calvin Batchelor wrote one called THE BIRTH OF THE
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PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF ANTARCTICA that was not only real SF but real
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literature, at one and the same time. Rudy Rucker's THE SEX SPHERE is witty
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and stylish and takes on sexual stereotyping with breathtaking candor. Even
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Paul Preuss, whose BROKEN SYMMETRIES tries hard to be a soap opera and a spy
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story, still makes big league points about the way politicians use scientists
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and people use each other.
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These people are going to keep writing this sort of book no matter
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how many Nebulas Brin and Robinson and their ilk manage to rack up. Watch
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out, Mom and Dad. They're out to get you.
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** SF AND ROCK VIDEOS **
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While other media have made fantastic leaps in power and
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distribution, publishing remains a smokestack industry. Now word processors
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and videotex media have arrived: rude intrusions into the ivied halls of
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literary culture.
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These new technologies are pantingly ready to lay rude hands on the
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lilied flesh of literature, and the resulting indecencies are extremely
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promising opportunities for SF. Straight literature has never taken
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technology seriously, and as a result it has lobotomized itself. As it
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flounders in an increasingly senile search for its audience, its vigorous
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bastard child, science fiction, might conceivably lead this technological
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revolution and make itself the dominant mode of literary expression in the
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21st century. We owe it to ourselves to try.
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We can learn from another successful synthesis of art and technology:
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20th century pop music.
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There has been a long alliance between SF and pop music, from the
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jazz of the '40's and '50's through to today's hi-tech rock. These despised
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genres have fermented happily together over several decades, borrowing one
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another's audiences and terminologies. ("New Wave" for one: a term drawn
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from SF and applied to rock through the mutual tradition of fanzines.)
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Now, through the new art form of rock videos, we are confronted with
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a blazingly vigorous new medium that exploits a host of new technologies to
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dazzling effect. Consider the list: electric guitars, synthesizers,
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recording technology, video cameras, satellite transmission, cable, and
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television, all dedicated to the noble effort to blow the minds of today's
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youth. Is it any wonder that parents clamor for grotesque "lock-boxes" to
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keep their kids from mainlining MTV twelve hours a day? These are the same
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archetypal parents who have been tossing out boxes of comics and rocket-ship
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books for the past 50 years, for identical motives.
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Recently we have been treated to the appalling spectacle of SF
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figures allying themselves with the forces of reaction. "Kids don't read any
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more," they whine. The kids are down the street popping quarters into video
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games instead of publishers' pockets; they're home watching MTV. What should
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writers and publishers learn from this?
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A sense of shame. Why aren't kids lined up eight deep for the latest
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issue of ISAAC ASIMOV'S? Why isn't ANALOG doled out from locked crates by
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frowning members of the PTA? Because they are DULL. Worse than dull;
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they're reactionary, clinging to literary-culture values while a cybernetic
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tsunami converts our times into a post-industrial Information Age.
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It is little wonder that rock videos, like Napoleon, have pulled
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SF's crown from the gutter and placed it on their own heads. Movement,
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excitement, color, reckless visionary drive: you will find these in
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abundance in the work of video directors raised from birth on SF.
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Consequently they are producing not only excellent SF but SF often better
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than that in the written media.
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Consider a work like Culture Club's KARMA CHAMELEON, an irresistable
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alternate history where 19th century blacks and whites frolic together under
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the benevolent aegis of transvestite Rastafarianism. As social statement,
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this blows away the pallid efforts of modern SF's white-bread legions of
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feminists and libertarians.
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Has there ever been an adolescent power fantasy to compare with Billy
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Idol's DANCING WITH MYSELF, where the apotheosis of vicious teenage angst
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capers under the flaming eyes of Oktobriana, lust-goddess of the Soviet
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pornographic underground? Or a fantasy pastorale with the vividness of
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SAFETY DANCE by Men Without Hats, with its subtly monstrous combination of
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18th century gypsy merriment and the ominous whine of banks of synthesisers?
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Already rock videos have seized the imagination of SF's golden-age
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audience of 14-year-olds. SF is missing out on this action for very real and
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cogent reasons. The problem is not the purported illiteracy of today's
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decadent youth, but their sheer lack of interest in a genre sleepwalking its
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way into the middle-aged pipe-and-slippers comfort of the NEW YORK TIMES
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Bestseller List.
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The graying of SF has left it with a cadre of established writers who
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are rightfully reaping the harvest of years of dedication. But we must not
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be misled into thinking this a sign of robust health. It is to a great
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extent the result of a cultural power vacuum created by the abject collapse
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of straight literature. Unless SF acts now to recapture its sparkle, we may
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expect a crippling long-term drain of future writers. Today's young
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visionaries will ignore SF's inbred tail-chasing for the wide-open spaces of
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video.
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This is a challenge akin to those of other smokestack industries: a
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crying need to re-think, re-tool, and adapt to the modern era. SF has one
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critical advantage: it is still a pop industry which is close to its
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audience. It is not yet wheezing in the iron lung of English departments or
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begging for government Medicare through arts grants.
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SF has always preached the inevitability of change. Physician, heal
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thyself.
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CHEAP TRUTH On-Line 809-C West 12th Street, Austin, Texas 78701. NOT
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COPYRIGHTED. Vincent Omniaveritas, editing. Shiva the Destroyer, systems
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operation. "All Power to the Imagination"
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