Thinking Through the Science Fiction Machine. 
            Dietmar  Dath. Niegeschichte: Science Fiction als Kunst- und Denkmaschine. [Neverstory: Science Fiction as Art- and Thinking-Machine]. Matthes &  Seitz, 2019. 942 pp. €38 pbk, €25,99 ebk.
            With Niegeschichte [Neverstory], German sf author and cultural critic Dietmar Dath presents an  erudite, well-written, and stimulating account of sf as cultural history. While  the book mainly focuses on literature, it also discusses other narrative forms  including films, the visual arts, and even pop music. Niegeschichte,  however, wants to be more than sf history. Dath balances an in-depth account of  the genre’s development with an ambitious interpretive approach. Two strains of  theory frame the historical narrative. Readers familiar with Dath’s work will  not be surprised by the central role of Marxist aesthetics, and in particular  the claim that “art is a form of understanding” (22, all translations mine):  Dath is one of the most prominent Marxist writers in Germany. Additionally, the  text deploys elements from conceptual mathematics, especially category theory,  to explain the poetic relations within and among the artworks he discusses.  While the theoretical explorations at times expand into the overtly abstract,  they are generally well argued and detailed enough to carry Dath’s arguments  over nearly one thousand pages. 
            Niegeschichte appears to be written for the casual sf reader: the dustcover blurb  advertises it as an “introduction to [Dath’s] favorite topic.” Its chronological  organization and the (mostly) canonical text selection underline the book’s  introductory character, as does Dath’s personal investment and his talent as a  writer. His honest display of excitement for many of the analyzed stories,  novels, and films is often infectious, and the well-structured narrative of the  historical part shows that Dath’s talents as a novelist transfer seamlessly to  the cultural-historical approach. Niegeschichte also makes frequent  allusions to films, literary texts, and philosophical theories from outside the  genre. These references allow readers to draw parallels between sf and other  areas of cultural history. But the book’s analytical aspirations go far beyond  introducing new readers to the sf canon. Rather, its main goal is to analyze  its history in order to develop a precise understanding of its main  characteristics. In this sense, Niegeschichte is a  historical-materialist account.
            Chapter  I presents both personal and analytical motivations behind the book and  clarifies the grounding of Dath’s poetic thinking in Marxist theories, from  Marx himself via George Lukács to East German writer Peter Hacks. Dath makes  clear that the references to non-sf artworks and general theories not only draw  in casual readers, but also support his claim that sf presents a unique  narrative mode that “opens up a cultural history of its era” (27). Dath calls  sf an “Art- and Thinking-Machine,” as the book’s subtitle has it. A machine is  “everything that replaces, supports, and expands our memory—i.e. writing,  image, storage—and everything that allows us to manipulate these stored data  more effectively …: the alphabet, mathematical symbols, all rules to manipulate  them, words, sentences, equations” (96). The historical narrative presented in Niegeschichte is also an inspection of this machine, answering the questions “What kind  of machine is SF? Who constructed it? Who possesses it? Who uses it? Against  what? What for?” (103).
            A  central concept of the book is what Dath calls “Aufhebungsfunktor” (“suspension  functor” 72, passim). It combines Coleridge’s suspension of disbelief  with Dath’s ambitious program of a poetics inspired by the mathematics of  category theory, of which functor is a central concept. Dath understands sf not  as the accumulation of all texts that deal with future civilizations,  spaceships, aliens, and/or time travel but rather as the genre’s formal and  functional characteristics. Category theory does not describe discrete objects  or sets of them, but “when, how, where, and in which ways something can be  transformed into something else” (71). And these are exactly the questions Dath  poses about sf history. The suspension functor describes the suspension of our  “expectation of experiencing the world” and substitutes an alternative set of  rules—those that are characteristic of the three branches of fantastic  literature: sf, horror, and fantasy. Sf relies on what Dath then calls  “negative induction,” or “neginduction” (79, 268-69). Although the rules of any  science-fiction story can be arbitrary, sf narratives need to explain and  unfold them in a logical fashion. These concepts allow Dath to tell the story  of sf through the genealogy of its poetic and epistemic forms. For all its  intellectual rigor and the undeniably stimulating perspectives that Dath gains  from these ideas, the same points could have been made with a less daunting  (and at times, circuitous) theoretical model. 
            The  historical trajectory Niegeschichte proposes follows a conventional  storyline. Each chapter introduces a great variety of texts and authors.  Surprisingly, these sections do not feel repetitive at all because of Dath’s  attention to each story’s particularities. Though some analyses are stronger  than others, and some remain opaque (as in the case of Samuel R. Delany’s Dhalgren [1975]), most of these sections present unique takes on classic texts.  Individual interpretations are not independent, but always part of the greater  trajectory of Dath’s functional sf history. Despite Dath’s many readings, there  remain some blind spots. For examples, the Strugatzky brothers are barely  mentioned, and outsiders such as R.A. Lafferty do not appear at all. And while  non-anglophone writers are introduced as well, their roles are always defined  by their relationship to anglophone sf.
            Chapter  II is devoted to what Dath calls “Proto-SF.” Beginning with Mary Shelley and  Edgar Allan Poe as inventors of the suspension functor, this chapter then  focuses on Jules Verne and H.G. Wells. Chapters III and IV explore the birth  and blooming of Gernsback’s and Campbell’s Golden Age. Chapter IV mostly zooms  in on Robert Heinlein (although he shares the chapter with Isaac Asimov and  Ivan Yefremov). Despite his admiration for Heinlein’s craftsmanship, Dath does  not ignore some of the more problematic aspects of Heinlein’s work. Discussing Farnham’s  Freehold (1964), he offers a convincing analysis of its racist undertones  and shows the continuity between Heinlein’s problematic fictionalization of  race relations and contemporary racism.
            Niegeschichte is dedicated to Harlan Ellison, who appears throughout the book in the many  roles he played in sf history—as author, editor, and script writer, but he  looms largest in chapter V, which discusses the New Wave. This chapter features  the greatest concentration of individual readings, discussing authors from  Michael Moorcock and Ellison to J.G. Ballard, Philip K. Dick, and Octavia  Butler. One section even discusses David Bowie’s contribution, or indebtedness,  to New Wave sf. Highlighting the individual characteristics of each text yet  also stressing their common concerns, this chapter is an impressive display of  the functional claim that guides Dath’s account, and certainly the one where its  historical coherency is displayed most densely.
            Dath  mentions Joanna Russ’s sf criticism as a model for his own critical writing in  Chapter I (21), and Chapter VI, which is devoted to Russ’s work, claims that  she has often been misread as overtly dry and complicated. These accusations,  Dath argues, stem from the fact that many readers misunderstand Russ’s main  conclusions. As he writes about The Female Man (1975): “Again, Russ  thinks one step ahead of the average person who has a try at sf: the opposite  of utopia is not dystopia. Likewise, the opposite of the victory of the  oppressed is not the victory of the oppressors, but a reality without prospects  where it seems unimaginable that the conflict between the two would ever come  to an end” (476). Dath reads Russ’s fiction and criticism as intimately  related, describing her poetics as being focused on “critique and immanence”  (thus the title of the chapter’s last section, 312). In Dath’s convincing  reading, Russ writes sf that does not function as a mirror for the world today,  but instead radically reflects the limits of utopian thinking itself. This  makes her, in the context of Niegeschichte, a writer with a unique  insight into the way “negative induction” guides sf’s imagination.
            Chapter  VII focuses on the diffusion of the genre that many critics and writers  associate with the success of Star Wars (1977). Its strongest point,  besides its discussion of cyberpunk, is its thoughtful differentiation between  the moving image and literature. Again, Ellison takes center stage, both as a  critic of Star Wars and as a script writer for Star Trek (“The  City on the Edge of Forever,” 1967). The strength of this chapter, however,  lies in Dath’s sharp distinction between the aesthetic characteristics of text  and moving image. Discussing his own struggles in writing about films, Dath  argues that one needs to read moving images as exactly that—images. This leads  to a wonderful reading of the illustrations of Chris Foss, whose painting  “Cities in Flight: A Clash of Cymbals” (1974) is reproduced on the cover of Niegeschichte.  By diving into cyberpunk throughout the second half of the chapter, this  illuminating discussion of sf’s intermediality and the different modes of  reading it requires changes to historically organized sections. One wonders if  this chapter could have been divided in two. This is one of the rare occasions  in which Niegeschichte seems to collapse before the huge amount of  material it wants to cover.
            Chapter  VIII presents a second close reading of a single author. Greg Egan’s work, Dath  claims, is on a level with “Verne’s or Wells’s, Ellison’s or Russ’s” (621) in  terms of its importance to the development of sf. Here, Dath most clearly  deviates from writing an introduction to sf. Instead, he dives into an ambitious  and demanding reading of Egan’s work. Building on Egan’s own sophisticated  integration of science into his fiction, Dath shows how the Australian writer  creates a radical version of sf that “partially fulfills, partially expands,  and partially demolishes” the limits of sf’s poetic program (621). Dath  stresses the importance of probability theory and modal logic for Egan’s  poetics. In a detailed analysis of Egan’s novel Permutation City (1995),  Dath shows that the scientific topics of Egan’s novels can also be identified  as guiding their poetic structure. Here, the mathematical concepts Dath uses in  his introduction work well with his readings of Egan’s prose (and those of both  Ted Chiang and Cixin Liu, whom Dath introduces as Egan’s poetic kin).
            Chapters  IX and X pick up on this synthesis and present the theoretical conclusions Dath  draws from his historical account. Chapter IX sums up the book’s aesthetic  claims, the idea that sf’s functional attributes enable “world extrapolation  via world building as reflection” (793). This chapter further builds upon  readings of Egan’s work (here, the story “TAP” [1995]). Dath underscores an  argument he makes throughout the book, namely that the science any given story  fictionalizes also provides its poetic structure. In chapter X, this aesthetic  insight illustrates sf’s epistemological claims. Inspired by Russ, Dath reads  sf from a historical-materialistic standpoint. The stories, protagonists, and  theories sf explores are not part of an escapist world unrelated to ours, but  very much part of it. Niegeschichte’s subject, Dath explains, is the  “historical-social praxis of sf,” which he hopes to “arm against the machines  that beleaguer mass consciousness, and that Mark Fisher called ‘capitalist  realism’—the induced stupidity of the imperialistic ‘There is no alternative’”  (871) This sentence, hidden in parentheses, may be the most outspoken  programmatic sentence of the book. Even if one disagrees with Dath’s  theoretical choices, one must acknowledge that Niegeschichte provides  many well-structured arguments regarding sf’s potential to imagine and think  through alternative futures for our contested present—even if (or precisely  because) these futures are written in stories that never will be.—Christoph  Schmitz, Duke University
            
            Translingual and Transcultural Ties between Western and  Chinese SF. 
            Jing Jiang. Found in Translation: “New People” in  Twentieth-Century Chinese Science Fiction. Association for Asian Studies,  2021. 144 pp. $16 pbk. 
            Jing  Jiang’s Found in Translation is a concise but comprehensive exploration  of the translingual and transcultural ties between Western and Chinese sf from  the late nineteenth century through the end of the twentieth century. The book  focuses on the motif of the so-called “new people” with whom Chinese sf writers  were often preoccupied over the past century. Through close readings of both  original Western works and their Chinese counterparts focused on the idea of  creating new people, the author reveals how this motif has undergone various metamorphoses  throughout the history of Chinese sf.
            This  book is a fine complement to existing scholarship. Recent years have witnessed  the publication of several English-language scholarly monographs on Chinese sf,  such as Nathaniel Isaacson’s Celestial Empire: The Emergence of Chinese  Science Fiction (2017), Lorenzo Andolfatto’s Hundred Days’ Literature:  Chinese Utopian Fiction at the End of Empire, 1902–1910 (2019), Hua Li’s Chinese  Science Fiction during the Post-Mao Cultural Thaw (2021),  and Will Peyton’s Chinese and Western  Literary Influence in Liu Cixin’s Three Body Trilogy (2021). These  monographs are either author-based studies or focus on one specific historical  period. Jiang’s book employs the idea of “new people” as a thread to draw  different historical periods together and reveal how Chinese sf has assimilated  various features of Western sf while still evolving into a relatively  indigenous literary genre in China. By means of the overarching concept of “new  people,” the book embarks upon in-depth exploration of some important issues  such as realism and posthumanism in Chinese science fiction. It situates  Chinese sf “within a dynamic model of world literature,” exploring the  interwoven connections between Chinese sf, translation, and the nation-state  (2). It traces how various Western sf works have crossed linguistic and  national barriers to reach China, and how various generations of Chinese sf  writers have assimilated, transformed, and expanded various Western sf motifs  in their own works. Found in Translation demonstrates the important role  that sf has played during the past century in building a modern China. It shows  how the elitist aspects of Chinese sf were emphasized at the expense of the  genre’s connections to popular culture.
            The  book is chronologically structured and topically organized. It contains an  introduction, four chapters, and an epilogue. Chapter One, “Medicine for the  Mind, Panacea for the Nation,” situates the emergence of Chinese sf within the  context of intellectual discourse about China’s modernization from the  mid-nineteenth century to the beginning of the twentieth century. This chapter  illustrates how prominent Chinese intellectuals such as Liang Qichao and Lu Xun  stressed the instrumental potential of science fiction in disseminating  knowledge about modern science and democracy in China, thereby promoting sf as  a subgenre of modern-day fiction. Following earlier research by Patrick Hanan,  this chapter also examines the pioneering work done by the Anglican missionary  John Fryer (1839-1928) in the late Qing period. Fryer not only promoted modern  science and underscored the importance of modern fiction, but he also viewed  the synergy of modern fiction and science as a panacea for rooting out late  imperial China’s “three evils”—opium addiction, formulaic civil service exam  essays, and foot-binding. Fryer’s writings exerted much influence over  prominent Chinese intellectuals such as Yan Fu, Liang Qichao, and Lu Xun, who  embraced Western science “as a new, enlightened way of understanding the world  characteristic of the modern age” (17).
            Chapter  Two, “Scientifically Formed or Reformed,” focuses on early Chinese sf writers’  fascination with creating artificial humans in a laboratory; this literary  theme “gave rise to a literary vision” of “the malleability or programmability  of the soul” (40). This chapter traces the transnational journey of the  American novelist Louise J. Strong’s sf story, “An Unscientific Story” (1903),  through multilingual translations. The original story’s skeptical and critical  views about creating human life in a laboratory setting metamorphose into a  celebration of scientific advances capable of doing precisely this in Lu Xun’s  Chinese translation, given an entirely new title, “The Art of Creating  Humanity” [Zaorenshu, 1905]. This Chinese-language version was based on a  Japanese translation of the English-language original, and it inherited the  Japanese translation’s celebratory tone about scientific advances. In contrast  with Lu Xun’s optimistic view, Bao Tianxiao’s two Chinese translations, “The  Art of Creating Humanity” [Zaorenshu, 1906] and “The New Art of Creating  Humanity” [Xin zaorenshu, 1910], offered a more cautious view about creating  artificial life, raising some sober questions about “the boundary between  humans and machines” and “the free will and autonomy” of lab-created organisms  (42-43). This chapter also examines techniques for remaking the Chinese mind  through brain-changing surgery in Xu Nianci’s “New Tale of Mr. Braggadocio”  [Xin Faluo xiansheng tan, 1905] and reshaping the human soul by means of  radio-programming technology in Gu Junzheng’s “Dream for Peace” [Heping de  meng, 1940]. Ironically, these late Qing and early  Republican Chinese writers’ obsessions with creating human bodies in a lab  setting and remolding the human mind were later taken up by Mao Zedong and  utilized for ideological thought control in the Yan’an and PRC eras.
            Chapter  Three, “Report from the Future: Science Fiction as a Mode of Realist Writing,”  examines connections between Chinese sf and literary realism during the  post-Mao cultural thaw from the late 1970s to the early 1980s. The chapter  demonstrates that from the 1950s to the early 1980s, PRC sf was “fundamentally  a mode of realist writing” in the sense that it took “the representation of the  real to be its ultimate task” and was aesthetically aligned with literary  realism (53). During the post-Mao cultural thaw, Chinese sf aimed to  “prophesize, rather than fantasize, a future reality and to report it back to  the present” (53). In order to substantiate her argument, the author traces the  translingual and transnational journey of the American writer David Rorvik’s  novel In His Image: The Cloning of a Man (1978) from the US to China.  While the original open-ended work reveals Rorvik’s deep skepticism and  uncertainty about the ethics of human cloning, its Chinese sequel, Ye Yonglie’s Reaping What One Sows [Zishi qiguo, 1979], and Ni Kuang’s Backup [Houbei, 1981] reveal these Chinese authors’ “unshakable faith” (74) in human  cloning and in science and technology to “demystify and forestall any  uncertainty in the future” (65). Both Chinese narratives unequivocally embrace  the technology of human cloning, exploring the fate of cloned humans and  related legal and moral issues.  
            Chapter  Four, “Posthumans and ‘New People’ in Postsocialist Imaginations,” reveals  tensions between humanism and posthumanism as presented in three Chinese robot  narratives written in the early 1980s. The chapter examines how Karel Čapek’s R.U.R. (1920) offers a narrative template for Chinese sf writers seriously to affirm  the human factor in various posthumanist episodes. The author offers a close  reading of Xiao Jianheng’s Professor Shaluomu’s Fallacy [Shaluomu  jiaoshou de miwu, 1980), Wei Yahua’s “Dream in the Land of Tender Bliss”  [Wenrou zhixiang de meng, 1981], and Tong Enzheng’s “The Death of the World’s  First Robot” [Shijie shang diyige jiqiren zhi si, 1983]. All three narratives  examine social interactions between humans and machines such as robots,  confirming humanity’s capacity to experience pain and suffering, emotions, and  free will. Jiang’s analysis reveals how these early 1980s sf narratives  resonate with various contemporaneous Chinese debates among intellectuals  regarding a renewal of humanism in China. Hence, this chapter strengthens the  author’s argument in Chapter Three that Chinese science fiction presents the future  as “a new vantage point” for commenting on present-day social issues (76).
            The  epilogue draws upon discussions from the four preceding chapters to present the  book’s conclusion that a C.T. Hsia-style “‘obsession with China’ [as argued in  Hsia’s History of Modern Chinese Fiction (1961)]) as the collective  emotional complex shared by almost all modern Chinese writers translates into a  more concrete concern in Chinese sf to establish a body of worthy citizens who  collectively inhabit and make up the modern nation” (93). The last section of  the book deals with Chinese sf’s obsession with new people specifically related  to the human body and language. This section explores four narratives: Mark  Twain’s Eve’s Diary (1906), Lu Xun’s “Mending the Sky” [Butian, 1922],  Feng Jicai’s “Eve on the Last Day of the World” [Mori Xiawa, 1997], and Lao  She’s Cat Country [Maocheng ji, 1933]. While Twain’s Eve’s Diary comes across “as a deeply personal work” commemorating his late wife, Chinese  writers such as Lu Xun read Eve as a new image of a woman who embodies  “boundless energy and curiosity” (98). Consequently, Twain’s utopian Eve turns  into a lonely, “beautiful and noble individual against an unsightly and ignoble  crowd” in the three Chinese dystopian narratives. Furthermore, Eve’s linguistic  gift in Twain’s narrative turns into an “alienation of language and breakdown  of communication” in these Chinese writers’ works (101). The discrepancies  between Twain’s narrative and its Chinese counterparts further demonstrate how  Western literary motifs that took root in China have undergone mutations in  cultural, national, and historical perspectives.
            This  book is a timely contribution to ongoing discussions about humanism and  posthumanism in contemporary global technoscientific culture. It is also an  important contribution to both Chinese sf studies and world literature studies.—Hua  Li, Montana State University
            
            Media, Underwater.
            Melody Jue. Wild Blue Media:  Thinking Through Seawater. Duke UP, 2020. 240 pp. $99.95 hc, $25.95 pbk.
            It can  be estranging for terrestrial readers to read and write about the sea. Melody  Jue’s compelling new monograph Wild Blue Media: Thinking Through Seawater focuses  on the ocean’s ability to disorient and displace, using seawater to challenge  the terrestrial biases in media theory and philosophy. Positioning the ocean as  a “horizon of possibility” (xi) for human thought, Jue underlines the  importance of embodiment, perception, and mediation to the ways in which  scholars, artists, and writers engage with underwater worlds.
            Melody  Jue is the recipient of the 2021 Speculative Fictions and Cultures of Science  Book Award from the Science Fiction Research Association (SFRA)  for Wild Blue Media. This recognition  is well deserved, as the monograph makes important contributions to a wide  range of fields, including (but not limited to): media studies, the emerging  interdisciplinary field of ocean studies or “blue humanities,” literary theory,  science and technology studies, and sf studies. Like the wider field of the  blue humanities, Wild Blue Media seeks to shift critical inquiry from  land-based environments to the planet’s expansive seas. In doing so, Jue  participates in a growing conversation about the ways media theory accounts for  physical environments, including in such works as John Durham Peters’s The  Marvelous Clouds (U of Chicago P, 2015), Nicole Starosielski and Janet  Walker’s Sustainable Media (Routledge, 2016), and Sean Cubitt’s Finite  Media (Duke UP, 2017).
            Jue’s  rhetorical and theoretical emphasis on disorientation runs throughout the  monograph, framing her methodological intervention as well as her engagement  with sf studies. Jue begins the introduction with an anecdote about an early  dive in North Carolina’s Outer Banks. She reflects: “I quickly realized that  becoming a good diver was going to require extensive rehabituation.… It would  be some time before, as Jacques Cousteau once put it, I would experience my  ‘flesh feeling what the fish scales know’” (2). This sets up an analogy between  the disorienting experience of learning to scuba dive and the process of  displacing land-based understandings of direction, movement, and transmission  within Western media theory. She argues that this process of rehabitation for a  new diver from “terrestrial habits of movements and orientation” to ways of  being underwater can be adapted to the theorization of media. As a “wild” and  nonhuman environment, the ocean can be used to strain and expand habituated  understandings of depth, direction, light, and sound (xii). Jue uses this  milieu to “test” the limits of media—radio, newspapers, telephones, computers,  satellites, cinema—as well as human perception (xi). 
            Seawater  can activate theory’s “sensitivity to the role of the milieu” (2) through both  its unique properties (salinity, pressure, increased density, coldness,  electrical conductivity) and the ways in which artists, writers, and activists  have engaged with specific oceans in their work. Jue describes this  intervention as a “milieu-specific analysis”: a way of identifying how ways of  thinking about communication and the world develop in relation to one’s  environment (3). Changing this environment can help to shift forms of thought  and raise new questions. Engaging with embodiment and milieu in this way, Jue’s  method uses self-reflexivity as well as theories of situated knowledge in  feminist science studies (see Donna J. Haraway, Simians, Cyborgs and Women,  Routledge 1991).
            Metaphors  of submission, disorientation, and estrangement from scuba diving frame each of  the book’s four chapters. In the first three, Jue imaginatively “submerges”  (her word) a concept from media studies—interface, inscription, and  database—into the ocean to investigate how our understanding shifts within a  new milieu (5). This methodology of “conceptual displacement” is strongly  informed by the tools of cognitive estrangement and extrapolation offered by  sf. According to Jue: “the utopian and science fictional impulse of this book  is to explore the ocean as a force for conceptual reorientations that sometimes  estranges what we thought was familiar” (5). As a “science fictional strategy”  (4), this methodology hinges on a speculative thought experiment: what happens  if I take x and stick it in the sea? What does this teach me about x and about the oceanic environment x interacts with? What might I learn  about my ways of thinking in the process? As she demonstrates across the book’s  four chapters, conceptual displacement can take the form of physical immersion  of media artefacts and human bodies into the ocean, technically mediated  immersion (such as with hydrophones and underwater cameras), or “speculative  immersion” through film, literature, and the arts (7). This expansive approach  to speculative inquiry is perhaps the monograph’s most important contribution  to sf scholarship, as Jue offers a method which can be applied a wide range of  texts and contexts beyond speculative or fantastic literatures.
            Chapter  1 builds on media theories of the interface as a flat surface users operate to  control information as they examine the biological interface of the human lung  when diving. Unlike interfaces such as keyboards and screens from studies of  digital technologies, Jue argues that the lung becomes an interface through  humans’ dependency on “an ecology of air” underwater (35). The chapter offers a  phenomenological reading of the interface through close readings of memoirs and  other nonfiction narratives about “the sensory and cognitive estrangement of  breathing underwater” (36). Focusing on Jacques Cousteau’s autobiographical  accounts of early experiments with the aqualung in Le Monde du silence [The Silent World, 1953] and Dr. Sylvia Earle’s Sea Change: A Message from  the Ocean (1995), Jue theorizes the submersion, saturation, and volume of  biological interfaces. Interestingly, she also touches upon the ways that  gender mediates divers’ experiences of the ocean and the design of diving  technologies (submarines, scuba tanks) as prosthetics for human survival.  Chapter 1 concludes by turning to multispecies connections between human lungs  and the ocean as “the blue ‘lungs’ of the planet” (37). She explores  submergence as a strategy of climate change protest with the example of the  Maldives’s 2008 underwater cabinet meeting, designed to draw international  attention to the impacts of rising sea levels on the island nation.
            Chapter  2 returns to Jue’s interest in sf, centering on Vilém Flusser’s Vampyroteuthis  Infernalis [The Vampire Squid, 2011] and the concept of inscription.  Flusser creates “a media fable” about photography through the figure of the  vampire squid (72), and he speculates on what media might resemble for the  cephalopod. Reading Vampyroteuthis Infernalis both literally and  allegorically, Jue explores the challenges of recording and transcription in  the abyss of the deep ocean. She uses the vampire squid to consider inscription  technologies such as photography, and to speculate how “information might be  preserved underwater through the inscription of memories on subjects” rather  than through engraved hard surfaces, photo-imagining, and electric polarities  in terrestrial recording media (75-76). This attention to the ocean-specific  conditions of media in the benthic world of the vampire squid opens up a  parallel between the abyss and the photography darkroom. 
             In  Chapter 3, Jue considers the materiality of seawater and the ways oceans make  possible a different form of database storage than digital technologies. Whereas  media theory predominately assumes “a default environment of air” for  computational storage and “hard substrates” (113), Jue explores how the ocean  might serve as a liquid storage substrate. The chapter focuses on two  interactive databases, Google Ocean and ATLAS in silico, which offer  users digital visualizations of oceans. Analyzing the projects’  representational choices, aesthetic, and form, she explores how matters of  scale shape database logic. At the same time, Jue explores “the discursive and  material imaginations of databases and oceans” and the ways “the language of  fluidity” shapes ideas of digital storage (116).
            Chapter  4 synthesizes the preceding conceptual reworking of interface, inscription, and  database through a study of underwater museum environments. Here Jue’s  narrative and methodological uses of diving come most strongly to the fore. She  conducts a comparative media analysis of two underwater museums: Jason deCaires  Taylor’s Museo Subacuático del Arte (Underwater Museum) in the Cancún  National Marine Park, opened in 2010, and the geological “museum” of the “Dos  Ojos” (Two Eyes) cenote in Tulum, Mexico, off the Yucatán Peninsula. Jue  compares the experiences of visiting these places as a diver and accessing them  digitally through online photographs and Google Street View. For Jue, these  underwater places can prompt us to reconsider what we expect from museums, the  interfaces through which visitors experience them, and the ways that seawater  participates in a dynamic way with the “formation of history” (145).
            Throughout Wild Blue Media, Jue is careful to underscore how the ocean is not a  stable category: it is in constant motion, shaped by temperature shifts,  currents, and climate. Nor are all oceans the same. The chapters address a  number of different media projects, technologies, and entanglements with  seawater, underscoring how oceans embody different cultural meanings and  histories. This level of specificity is important because it avoids abstracting  the ocean into a vague cultural signifier or absolute, alien other. One of the  strengths of Wild Blue Media is the way it holds the general and the  specific at the same time, while foregrounding the practices of technological  and cultural mediation through which humans come to know the sea.
            In  addition to its methodological and theoretical contributions, Wild Blue  Media offers timely considerations of both theory’s environmental ethics  and the relationships between academics’ working environments and our  scholarship. Responsible scholarship about the ocean, Jue contends, must  address the anthropogenic effects of human activities (15)—including glacier  melt, rising sea levels, a warming ocean, and microplastic pollution—and the  uneven contributions of the Global North to the climate crisis. This attention  to the ethical and political implications of doing ocean studies surfaces in her  attention to the ways that theory can inform environmental activism. There is a  tension within Wild Blue Media around the urgent need for climate action  and the slower work of academic writing. Reflecting on the process of writing  during “a time of extreme environmental change,” she remarks that it often felt  like an inadequate response to the crisis (166). She voices a question that  dogs many of us in the environmental humanities: would advocating for policy  change and climate solutions be a more productive use of our time? The answer  Jue lands on will be reassuring for some readers and dissatisfying for others.  Critical scholarship, she argues, can act as a form of pre-activism or  preparatory work, raising questions about how people tell stories and create  media about environments (166). Environmental scholars can use Wild Blue  Media and other ocean theory to examine the “latent media imaginary” within  theories of the Anthropocene and public discourses about the nonhuman world  (25). Jue’s concluding remarks about theory’s “pre-activist role” reflect  broader conversations about the material ways that we can integrate activism  into our scholarly practice and use our scholarship to seed social change.
            Wild  Blue Media’s relevance to the contemporary moment has only grown in the  past year, as the COVID-19 pandemic has pushed humanities scholars to grapple  more meaningfully with embodiment, mediation, and the milieux in which we  think, breath, and write. Although “we generally think and write indoors,”  pandemic shut-downs created additional levels of estrangement and physical  displacement in our thinking (Tim Ingold, “Earth, Sky, Wind and Weather,” Journal  of the Royal Anthropological Institute [2007]: S29; qtd. 6). Read in this  context, Wild Blue Media invites us to radically question our milieu,  including the university itself. How might we use our embodied experiences of  teaching remotely, conferencing online, and juggling care work and remote work  to develop new theories of media—and new academic norms? With this in mind, Wild  Blue Media would have benefited from a more sustained engagement with  disability studies and crip theories of embodiment and perception, given Jue’s  commitment to displacing ingrained “terrestrial habits and assumptions” through  milieu-specific analysis (2).
            In sum, Wild Blue Media makes an important and timely contribution to the  oceanic turn within literary theory and media studies. Notably for a monograph  focused on mediation, the book is also a beautiful object. Jue’s skill and  passion for diving informing the volume’s design as well as her contributions  to media theory. The front cover features a lush color photograph of the giant  kelp forest off the coast of California’s Gull Island marine protected area,  taken by Jue herself. Several of the color plates are digital photographs also  taken by the author on diving trips, most strikingly of Jason deCaires Taylor’s  underwater installation “Silent Evolution.” These photographs, like Jue’s  opening anecdote about diving, show how deeply mediations of seawater permeate  the creation of this book. The result is an engaging and elegant reminder of  the ways that our imaginations continue to beckon us overboard.—Rachel Webb  Jekanowski, Memorial University, Grenfell Campus
            
            Constructing Human Futurity. 
            Stefan Lampadius. The  Human Future? Artificial Humans and Evolution in Anglophone Science Fiction of  the 20th Century. Universitätsverlag Winter, 2020. 240pp. $99.95. 
            Mainstream  literary criticism once tended to dismiss sf as popular literature with little  socio-cultural significance. Since around the 1970s, however, attitudes have  changed. Science fiction has come to be recognized as reflecting on and  extrapolating from real developments in technoscience, helping us make sense of  the complex dialectic of science and civilization. The book under consideration  is one such attempt to facilitate an understanding of how science and culture  impinge on each other and how those intersections affect the construction of  our real and literary future(s). 
            Lampadius  explores this sense-making function of sf by focusing on two related tropes,  evolution and the artificial human being. The Darwinian concept of evolution—a  gradual process involving continual change and interactions among different  forms of life—runs counter to the anthropomorphic, religious notion of divine  Creation. Over time, the idea of evolution has emerged as a metanarrative  applied to the interpretation and understanding of a broad range of phenomena.  The literary figure of the artificial human creature—created artificially or  made artificial through interpenetration with human-made objects—embodies our  understanding of the technologically mediated evolution of the human. Thus sf  novels that employ the trope of the artificial human become literary artefacts  of crucial importance to our understanding of ourselves.
            Lampadius  explains the cultural significance of tales of the artificial human in the  Introduction to his book and defines the range of the book’s coverage of the  theme. His choice of twentieth-century Anglophone sf is understandable,  although the omission of Margaret Atwood’s Oryx and Crake (2003) in this  critical discussion of the literature of artificial evolution is striking. In  the second chapter the author further elaborates on the cultural history of the  metanarrative of evolution and the role of sf while analyzing H.G Wells’s  handling of the theme in The Island of Doctor Moreau (1896).  Chapter 3 continues the analysis of the  reflection of our artificial future in sf, introducing the sub-theme of robots  as both embodiment of human artifice and players in the artificial evolution of  humanity while offering a perceptive analysis of Karel Čapek’s R.U.R. (1920). Eugenics, or what Lampadius terms creative evolution, is discussed with  reference to George Bernard Shaw’s Back to Methuselah (1921) and the  epic dimensions of the motif of evolution are underscored in a discussion of  Olaf Stapledon’s Last and First Men (1930).  
            Chapter  4 starts a new train in this historical analysis of sf with a consideration of  utopia as a sub-genre and its human implications. The discussion, however,  focuses chiefly on Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World (1932). The third and  the fourth sections of the chapter, dealing with the politico-economic  ramifications of the construction of a utopian state based on artificial mass  production of babies and other commodities, are the strongest. The next chapter  concentrates on the motif of the robot in sf and its human significance. The  analysis of how literary robotics impinges on the discourse of evolution and  what that means for the construction of our technoscientific future centers  around Isaac Asimov’s I, Robot (1950) and Jack Williamson’s The  Humanoids (1949). Chapter 6 continues the theme of artificial reproduction  introduced in Chapter 4. Cloning and other modes of artificial propagation are  discussed in the context of human reconstruction of nature through technology,  the problem of retaining human specificity, and related philosophical  questions. 
            Chapter  7 deals with the hybridization of the human in consequence of the dialectic of  the virtual and the real. This discussion of cyborg humanity—based on William  Gibson’s Neuromancer (1984)—is noteworthy especially for the analysis of  cyberspace as a new venue for the expression of the human. Before concluding  the book Lampadius continues, in Chapter 8, with the theme of the digitization  of humanity. Lampadius explores how   digital genesis impinges upon the evolution of new dimensions of life,  including new configurations of gender, in Greg Egan’s Diaspora (1997).
            Unfortunately,  the book discusses no works by women, although the theme is common among women  authors. Many women write futuristic sf involving humanoids and exploring all  the themes stressed in the book. The only female-authored text that gets any  special mention in the book is Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein (1817), the ur-text  of sf. Each chapter ends with a “Conclusion and Outlook” that are very  repetitious, and the addition of an index would have made the book friendlier  to navigate.
            Nevertheless, The Human Future? makes a meaningful contribution to critical discourse  on the construction of human futurity in twentieth-century Anglophone sf,  augmenting our knowledge of the inter-relationship of science  and culture, life and literature. The  plethora of themes that press upon the broad subject are handled in most parts  without the prose lapsing into turgidity, and this, in an ambitious academic  volume, is a virtue to be celebrated.—Suparna Banerjee, Krishnath College
            
            How Chinese SF Conquered China. 
            Hua Li. Chinese  Science Fiction during the Post-Mao Cultural Thaw. U of Toronto P, 2021.  234 pages. $65 hc & ebk. 
            In her  straightforward and well-researched study Chinese Science Fiction during the  Post-Mao Cultural Thaw, Hua Li focuses on the literary production of sf in  the post-Mao period, lasting roughly from 1976 to 1983. This short span of  literary history has generally been overlooked in existing discussions about  Chinese sf, which tend to emphasize either its emergence during the late-Qing  early modern period, or the global enthusiasm for works associated with the  recent “New Wave,” as signaled by the success of Liu Cixin’s Three Body trilogy. According to Li, the post-Mao thaw usually refers to the period  beginning with Mao Zedong’s death in 1976 after the Cultural Revolution  (1966-1976), and ends with the 1983 Anti-Spiritual Pollution Campaign, but the  works covered in Li’s monograph extend to a longer time span, from the 1950s to  the 1990s. 
            The  significant contribution that Chinese Science Fiction during the Post-Mao  Cultural Thaw makes to the dynamic and growing field of Chinese popular  culture is threefold: first, Li pays careful attention to works of Chinese sf  that have previously been marginalized in English-language scholarship,  particularly those belonging to the subgenre of “tech-sf” (jishu kehuan),  a mode of utopian writing about the promise of technology by mostly novice  writers that failed to flourish in the 1980s, but whose thematic concerns, as  Li demonstrates, eventually shaped the work of subsequent giants such as Liu  Cixin. Second, Li rightfully situates Chinese sf in conversation with the  broader category of world literature, especially in relation to Japanese,  Russian, and anglophone sf, such as in her detailed discussion in Chapter 5 of  the translational linkages between Xiao Jianheng’s short story “Buke’s  Adventure” (1961) and the issue of organ transplantation promoted in Soviet-era  sf narratives and theories (100-103). Finally, the book traces Chinese sf’s transmediality  (kua meiti) to an earlier pre-digital age of “small-scale, fledgling,  and yet significant media convergence” (135), confirming the genre’s lasting  adaptability and appeal.
            Methodologically,  Hua Li builds on the work of literary scholar Ken Gelder, adopting a  “quasi-academic or para-academic reading” approach to analyzing works of  popular fiction that attempts to balance more academically bound  “form-and-ideology interpretations” (4) with a deeper dive into the production,  distribution, and consumption of Chinese sf. Eschewing close readings of texts,  Li explains that her project analyzes the sociopolitical and cultural factors  that have shaped Chinese sf, in order to identify their uniquely “Chinese”  circumstances (5). For example, in chapter one Li shows how sf must strive to  overcome the limitations associated with two genres, kexue wenyi (literature and art in service of popularizing science) and children’s  literature, to finally assume “its rightful place in Chinese literature as an  independent subgenre of popular fiction” (5).
            Organized  into eight chapters, the book begins with a concise introductory overview of  the field, followed by four chapters devoted to individual authors, all  prominent and prolific figures in Chinese sf: Zheng Wenguang, Ye Yonglie, Tong  Enzheng, and Xiao Jianheng. Together, these chapters are a convincing testament  to the flexibility of the genre in the Chinese context, ranging from Zheng  Wenguang’s anthropocenic turn in his Mars series (1954-1984) and Ye Yonglie’s sf  crime thrillers, to Tong Enzheng’s archaeological take on aliens and Xiao  Jianheng’s youth fiction about robots. 
            In the  book’s last three chapters, Li works up to her main argument that sf from  mainland China during the post-Mao cultural thaw, despite being a  “government-backed literature,” can nevertheless be characterized by  subversiveness—in Li’s words, “blooming, contending, and boundary-breaking”  elements (165). Chapter six sheds light on the forgotten category of tech-sf  writers in the context of China’s Four Modernizations movement, as initially  proposed by Zhou Enlai in 1963, then promoted by Deng Xiaoping in the  late-1970s. Chapter seven analyzes the rich and diverse repository of  multimedia Chinese sf found in cartoons (manhua), illustrated storybooks  (lianhuanhua and xiaoren shu), radio, television, and film to  explain the factors that facilitated sf’s movement from the literary sphere to  that of pop culture. Chapter 8 concludes by highlighting Chinese literature’s  wavering between social realism and socialist realism through much of the  twentieth century, and shows that sf was no exception to the trend. Li’s  wide-reaching range of literary and scholarly references is impressive, as she  draws connections between Chinese sf and other popular genres such as romance  fiction and crime fiction.
            Clearly, Chinese Science Fiction during the Post-Mao Cultural Thaw will satisfy  contemporary Chinese sf fans looking for recommendations of new reading (and  viewing) material from this earlier period. More broadly speaking, sf fans will  also be pleased to find connections between Chinese sf and canonical sf writers  such as Ray Bradbury (45) and Robert Heinlein (50). But for those less familiar  with modern Chinese history, the question of why the period of 1976-1983 is  worth understanding may remain a puzzle. Li insists in chapter one that this is  an “important moment in the history of Chinese SF” because it serves as a  bridge between 1950s and 1960s sf and Chinese New Wave sf in the late-twentieth  and early twenty-first centuries (3). And on the last page, Li concludes that  studying the thaw period “helps us better understand the contemporary wave of  PRC SF that has gained global recognition, especially since the 2010s” (180).  As such, the book’s overarching aim appears to be proving that Chinese sf “has  been an unbroken chain” (133), a bold claim given the tumultuous political  shifts in the last century of Chinese history, many of which are characterized  by cycles of cultural repression. For instance, how else to interpret Ye  Yonglie’s deliberate move in 1983 from sf to reportage (72)? 
            Yet Hua  Li’s book provides a refreshing corrective to the common (western)  misconception that Chinese sf is a brand new phenomenon and complements  academic scholarship about this historical juncture that privileges elitist  literary modes. Two years ago, the New York Times Magazine boasted “How  Chinese Sci-fi Conquered America” (Alexandra Alter [23 December 2019], online). Chinese Science Fiction during the Post-Mao Cultural Thaw does not go so  far as to promise that 1970s-1980s Chinese sf will “conquer” international  readers, but it certainly makes a persuasive case for the genre’s persistence  in mainland China to the present day.
            In  November 2021, I went to the Victoria Art Gallery to view the “Retainers of  Anarchy” exhibit of contemporary Chinese art by the Vancouver-based Hong Kong  artist Howie Tsui. To my surprise, Chinese Science Fiction during the  Post-Mao Cultural Thaw was featured prominently on display at the museum’s  gift shop. Initially I mistakenly thought that perhaps the eye-catching book  jacket art was by Tsui, but no (the illustration is actually by Chen Wei), the  museum store employee informed me that he had been drawn to the title on a list  of publications about Chinese pop culture. The encounter speaks to the scarcity  of academic research on—and global thirst to learn about—this topic, and proves  why Li’s book makes such an important contribution to the field. 
            One  point worth further reflection: the author notes in chapter one that in the  1980s “there was no clear distinction between SF fans and general readers in  the PRC,” in contrast to the “present situation in which SF has become a type  of ‘fan literature’” (28). Whether or not this is an accurate assessment of sf  consumption in mainland China, where by far the most popular form of literature  now falls into the category of mystical fantasy (xuanhuan) web  literature, the popularity of the Three Body trilogy in translation acts  as a compelling counterexample to the genre’s perceived appeal as being limited  merely to hard core fans, suggesting that, on the level of world readership, we  may share more in common with the reading practices of the thaw period than  assumed at first glance.—Angie Chau, University of Victoria
            
            Breaking One-Dimensionality. 
            Joseph S. Norman. The  Culture of “The Culture”: Utopian Processes in Iain M. Banks’s Space Opera  Series. Liverpool: Liverpool UP, 2021. x+286 pp. £85/$120 hc.
            At both  the beginning and end of his new book on Iain M. Banks’s celebrated Culture  series (1987-2012), Joseph S. Norman mentions a peculiar fact of modern  technoculture: when the Falcon 9 rocket manufactured by Elon Musk’s SpaceX  completed its mesmerizing flight in 2016, slowly touching down like a car being  parallel parked, the platform it landed on was named after an immensely  powerful AI ship from Banks’s novel The Player of Games (1988), the Of  Course I Still Love You. In fact, the platform is just one of several  “autonomous spaceport drone ships” (ASDSs) made by SpaceX that takes its name  from the idiosyncratic and hyperintelligent ships of Banks’s series. Musk is  enamored with the Culture, clearly, but for Norman the naming convention also  indicates “the extent to which contemporary technoscience is both inspired by,  and catching up with, the fictional speculations of SF” (2). If this is the  case, our present moment certainly has become science-fictional, given that  space opera, the subgenre within which Banks’s series operates, is notorious  for its far-future and extravagant imaginings of posthuman bodies,  faster-than-light travel, advanced megastructures, and so much more. Could it  be that our own moment has caught up with the phantasmagoria of sf’s most  imaginative subgenre? Are we living in the era of space opera? 
            Probably  not. And Norman has no interest in pursuing such superficial platitudes. He is concerned, however, with mapping the representations of Banks’s society in  relation to utopian thinking (hence the subtitle of his book), and with  discerning the degree to which those representations also extend to notions of  empire. In doing so, he explores some of the fundamental aspects of utopian  thought, including the tricky and uncertain terrain that connects, sometimes  inconceivably, the present moment and the utopian future. As such, his work in  this book does in fact explore the relation between space opera and “now,”  looking carefully at the political context of Banks’s early novels—the rise of  Thatcherism and neoliberal capitalism—as well as its figurations of  technoscience, posthumanism, feminism, humanism, art, and a range of additional  topics that attach Banks’s spectacular visions to the somewhat more mundane  considerations of our own reality. 
            At the  same time, it may be the case that Banks’s Culture series qualifies as a  legitimately utopian effort by breaking with the mundanity of our present (as  opposed to creating a bridge to it). Borrowing from Fredric Jameson, Norman  suggests that the utopian form’s real value is not in describing the details and  contours of utopian societies—as undertaken by Thomas More and others—but  rather in the very act of imagining a fundamental shift or break with the  social, cultural, economic, technological, etc., status quo. Jameson calls this  “thinking the break” (Valences of the Dialectic [2009], 423), a phrase  that Norman uses repeatedly, including in the title of his second chapter,  “Thinking the Break: The Culture as Postscarcity Utopia.” The idea here is that  the very act of utopian imagination is itself utopian. One does not have to  usher in the break, or describe the break analytically, or justify the break  politically, but rather simply “think it.” And this is something that Norman  facilitates with aplomb. His book is well-researched, confident, and offers numerous  insights into the various and colorful ways that Banks “thought the break” with  his own contemporary society. This is useful framing, allowing Norman to focus  on the various and complex intersections of Banks’s fiction with utopianism,  instead of arguing in a more traditional manner that the Culture society is in  fact perfect—this is impossible, of course, because perfect for some is  imperfect for others. Indeed, Norman goes to great lengths to underscore the  various problematic and even concerning aspects of the Culture, which although  existing as a postscarcity and post-money civilization, continues to engage,  for example, in interventionist practices that could easily be construed as  imperialist. And there are other problems, including what some consider a  “strong essentialist tendency” (145) in its portrayal of gender and sexuality,  which more often than not relies upon “a clear gender binary” (149). 
            But  despite these dents in the Culture’s utopian visage, dents that Banks himself  foregrounded masterfully in his novels, the Culture series is an often hypnotic  and compelling undertaking to “think the break.” In fact, Norman’s analysis  makes it clear that Banks’s fiction—and perhaps even sf in  general—simultaneously offers an avenue for breaking with the kind of  one-dimensional and efficiency-obsessed rationalism that dominates modern  technocultures, where real political debate is replaced with “getting things  done on time” and where alternative forms of thinking and being are  unfathomable. This is Herbert Marcuse’s primary subject in One-Dimensional  Man (1964), and although Norman does not reference Marcuse or his  conception of one-dimensionality, his book is enormously successful as a  showcase for the Culture’s ability to push our thinking and imagination beyond  efficiency, iron-clad rationalism, mass consumption, advertising, and the other  preoccupations that Marcuse insists wither away the modern citizen’s capacity  for critical and utopian thought. The Culture series certainly “thinks the  break,” then, but it also breaks with a form of one-dimensionality that has  become not only entrenched but apocalyptic—one need look no further than the  climate catastrophe and the unwillingness of one-dimensional politicians and  bureaucrats to envision alternatives to our destructive habits. 
            This  book is indispensable in other ways as well. While interest in Banks and the  Culture has seen an upsurge over the last decade or so, and while we now have a  handful of full-length monographs covering his oeuvre, this is the first to be  oriented around a particular theme in relation to Banks—in this case,  utopianism. Other works, such as Paul Kincaid’s recent entry on Banks in the Modern  Masters of Science Fiction series, have functioned as more general overviews of  his sf output. Considering the complexity of the subject and its long history  as a literary and political form, Norman’s approach is appropriately  multifaceted. He analyzes Banks’s fiction within six broad categories  (corresponding to the six chapters of the book): world systems, where the  interventionist tendencies of the Culture are discussed; thinking the break,  where the post-money and postscarcity features of the Culture are analyzed;  posthumanism, where the technoscientific marvels of Banks’s work are dealt with;  the handy wo/man, which plays with Istvan Csicsery-Ronay’s technologiade archetype and explores the Culture’s representations of sex and gender; a  section on religion, exploring forms of atheism and humanism within Banks’s  work; and a concluding section on utopian forms of art within the Culture. Each  chapter is valuable in its own way and readers will undoubtedly form  preferences based on their own interests; for me, the section on art was  particularly appreciated, especially for the manner in which it discusses the  elaborate environments of the Culture’s GSVs, enormous and sentient ships that  house entire Culture societies. 
            No  utopia is perfect, and neither is any text. Although the robust sections of  Norman’s book allow him to approach the subject from interesting and productive  angles, each subsection is somewhat short and truncated, functioning almost  like a snippet of thinking and analysis. My impression was of reading William  Gibson’s more recent novels, where chapters are short and oriented around a  singular word or concept. As with Gibson’s fiction, here Norman’s various  subsections come together to form a rigorous, multifaceted narrative, but in a  work of nonfiction they can seem patchwork and unfinished. For instance, an  early subsection discussing the novel Inversions (1998) in relation to  the planetary romance type is mostly plot summary, and lacks the kind of  commentary or analysis one would expect from this type of monograph. In a  subsection on the concept of empire, Norman touches on Hardt and Negri’s use of  the term, but after a scant three paragraphs, the trajectory is abandoned. This  is unfortunate, especially for such an intriguing connection that could easily  support an entire study. In other cases, plot summary is repeated in sections  the are close to one another, creating an unnecessary repetition, especially  for those engaging in longer reading sessions. And in a subsection dealing with  Banks as pro-AI, Norman mentions the World Futurist Association (WFA) and  quotes their assertion that “the evolution towards free goods and a lack of  scarcity is, in fact, already under way, thanks primarily to technologies (such  as computers and the Internet) that have enabled and driven the growth of  digitization over the last twenty years” (76). Five pages later, in a  subsection on information as commodity, the same quotation is used and  presented as if it were new information. None of this is particularly damning,  but the approach Norman has taken here is something of a fix-up, where short  insights and investigations are pulled together under broader rubrics to form  the overarching analysis. Methodological considerations aside, the text still  stands as an invaluable contribution to the study of Banks’s Culture series, in  particular its relation to the space opera subgenre and the history of utopian  thinking.—Chad Andrews, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada 
            
            Manhood Revised. 
            Michael Pitts. Alternative  Masculinities in Feminist Speculative Fiction: A New Man. Lexington, 2021.  174 pp. $95 hc, $45 ebk.
            Michael  Pitts’s Alternative Masculinities in Feminist Speculative Fiction is a  book that needed to be written. It sheds light on a body of work  underappreciated for its critique of hegemonic masculinity and its effects on  society. Pitts traces the development of this critique over several decades as  it evolves along with feminist discourse, becoming more intersectional and  historically situated. 
            He  argues that “gender and national identity are mutually constitutive concepts”  (1), using Todd Reeser’s theory of a “gendered nation” (7). The novels analyzed  in the book help to question how these concepts and identities are produced  using a feminist utopia as a lens. This is a “critical utopia, for feminist  writers seeking to critique masculinities in ways not available to them by  realist fiction” that limits utopian imagining, instead “imbuing it with  revolutionary feminist reframings of the good society” in which these writers  imagine “the transformation of masculinities” (4). Pitts begins his exploration  with novels published in the early 1970s that were “utopias directly opposing  normative masculinities, [and] they outline the changes masculinities must  undergo for the better, feminist society to be realized and, while challenging  essentialism and the overlooking of race and sexuality within feminist circles,  generally reflect second-wave feminism” (8).
            The  first chapter discusses Dorothy Bryant’s The Kin of Ata Are Waiting for You (1971),  a novel that offers the presumed sf audience of young men a cautionary tale  about toxic manhood. It traces the transformation of a man who ascribes to  hegemonic patriarchy, telling how he learned to perform and identify with a  healthier, feminized masculinity that cares for others rather than only  himself. He begins as an exploitative, rapacious bully who, through his  encounter with a feminist utopia, develops empathy and compassion along with an  ethics of care. Pitts argues that this novel represents the possibility of men  learning alternative masculinities.
            The  second chapter moves on in the decade with an analysis of Ursula K. Le Guin’s The  Dispossessed (1974). This novel poses the ever-present danger of hegemonic  manhood by showing how enticing capitalist patriarchy is for men, offering  privilege and power to the violent, dominating manhood it validates. This book,  according to Pitts, usefully shows how vigilant men must be to avoid performing  this version of manhood through the novel’s depiction of a man raised in a  feminist utopia with no division of genders who is seduced by a society similar  to the contemporary US, which offers power over others.
            The  third chapter examines Marge Piercy’s Woman on the Edge of Time (1976).  Pitts notes that this novel crucially pivots from a focus on men to a story  about a Latina woman, depicting how she must navigate systemic racism and  patriarchal authority in both domestic and institutional medical settings,  contrasting this with a feminist utopia in a possible future. This future is  threatened by another possibility presented as a hypermasculine future that  further subjugates women, rendering them into commodities to be rented by  wealthy men. The novel is intersectional in its exploration of subjugation and  offers a choice of futures between feminist and hypermasculinist.
            The  fourth chapter discusses Octavia Butler’s Xenogenesistrilogy (1987-89),  expanding on the discourse of intersectional feminism with a post-apocalypse  protagonist, Lilith, a Black woman rescued by an invasive extra-terrestrial  colonizing species to enable them to breed a new hybrid species of humans and  Oankali, as they call themselves. These novels, as Pitts explains, radically  reimagine gendered and racialized social positions after our contemporary  society has been eradicated by nuclear war. Ultimately, they posit a possible  feminist utopia founded by Lilith’s hybrid child, a non-binary  human/Oankali/Ooloi who plays the role of a third crucial sex for reproduction  of the species and mediates sexual contact between male and female. Throughout  the series, Lilith and her brood must struggle against holdout groups of  patriarchal authority, often by defending against violence while at the same  time navigating their subjugation by the Oankali.
            Pitts’s  study ends with a discussion of N.K. Jemisin’s complex Broken Earth trilogy  (2015-2017). These fantasy novels, set in a post-apocalyptic world, examine  toxic hegemonic patriarchal masculinity by contrasting it with feminist utopian  islands, adding through their use of cataclysmic magic an ecological and global  perspective to the subject of alternative masculinities. 
            Alternative  Masculinities in Feminist Speculative Fiction provides a much-needed  exposition of the important work that these writers produced about types of  masculinity. It traces the evolution of a critique that reimagines  masculinities, estranging the performance of manhood as only sf allows. It also  maps the ways in which feminist discourse has become more inclusive and  intersectional since the publication of Bryant’s novel in 1971. It is a  valuable addition to masculinity studies that presents alternatives for the  future of gender performance and the effects of masculinity on women.—Ezekiel  Crago, Aims Early College Academy
            
            De-Automating Capitalist Automation. 
            J. Jesse  Ramírez. Against Automation Mythologies: Business Science Fiction and the  Ruse of the Robots. Routledge, 2021. 116 pp. $21.95 pbk, $59.95 hc, $20.65  ebk.
            A  specter is haunting the world—the specter of imminent, impending, inevitable automation.  All theorists, critics, and commentators across the political spectrum have  gathered to exorcise this specter in their own ways: Silicon Valley gurus, Wired magazine, techno-utopian liberal theorists, and even—albeit from a  distance—proponents of one form or another of so-called Fully Automated Luxury  Communism.
            Against  the common belief that full automation is imminent, impending, or at least  inevitable at some point, J. Jesse Ramírez’s brief monograph presents itself as  a “technoclasm” and—like my previous paragraph—it is inspired and driven by the  anti-capitalist impetus and the critical provocation of Marxian and Marxist  thinking. Self-consciously updating Roland Barthes’s mode of critique—the  “semioclasm” of his classic Mythologies—Ramírez’s book approaches  contemporary (post-2008) automation discourses as a mythological “business sf”  that mystifies the functioning of capitalism under the promise of an imminent  technological singularity: “Extrapolating from the premise of capitalism’s  technological dynamism, today’s leading prophets of automation foresee a  civilization-changing redistribution of mental and manual labor through robots,  artificial intelligences, and myriad other automated systems” (3). Thus, by  untangling the ideological framework of automation mythologies, Ramírez—joining  efforts with critics such as Aaron Benanav—shows that whether or not this  transformation is welcome, and whether it is imagined as a utopia or as a dystopia,  the underlying telos and the associated assumptions about contemporary  technologies all fall under the same mythological structure—and it is the  structure of these automation mythologies that becomes the main target of the  book’s “technoclasm.” 
            Dividing  his book into three parts, Ramírez moves from a definition of “Business Science  Fiction” in part I, to a story of “Original Automation” in part II, and finally  a collection of critical analyses of “Disenchanted Objects” in part III. It  must be said, although it may have already been inferred by the reader, that  even though Ramírez’s focus may be broadly cultural and  technological—especially as it draws from a considerable variety of fields of  inquiry, from academic, journalistic, and marketing materials—his book is  envisioned as “most importantly ... a work of science fiction studies,” a work  focused on what Istvan Csicsery-Ronay’s The Seven Beauties of Science  Fiction (2008) defined as “science-fictionality” (2).  
            In this  manner, Ramírez’s definition of “business sf” will clearly resonate with other  approaches that are interested in the recuperation of sf tropes, forms, and  discourses by capitalist corporations. It is precisely by examining automation  discourses as sf that Ramírez insists and clarifies that “the future of  automation is not a fact; it is an economic science fiction seeking to create  facts” (7). Singling out the works of Martin Ford, Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew  McAfee, Jerry Kaplan, and Nicholas Carr, the first part of the book makes the  argument that “Some of the most widely read and cited treatises on contemporary  automation are works of business science fiction—they are just not labelled as  such” (17). Ramírez’s idea here is that, once we “unlock the sf side of  automation discourse” (19), we may recognize how “business sf” functions as a  discursive attempt to foreclose futures alternative to those dictated by  capitalism. A couple of details will be highly illustrative of Ramírez’s  propositions here. On the one hand, he interestingly proposes that “Moore’s Law  can be understood as the business sf, the genre’s ur-myth” (22), insofar  as it is based on speculation and sustained by corporate make-believe. Moore’s  Law’s function would therefore be that of naturalizing the market logic of  compounding growth, thus turning a political-economic project into a seemingly  unavoidable technological “evolution.” On the other hand, Ramírez proposes that  “business sf” also has a popular but repressed counter-story, one that it seeks  to displace, even as it consciously draws from science-fictional tropes in  general: the idea of the Terminator. Even though this fictional AI machine “is  indeed far removed from the state of the art in automation ... there is truth  in the embellishment: the truth of domination” (27). Although the Terminator  narrative (especially the franchise) falls into a number of ideological  reifications, it “might also be useful for technoclastic thinking because it is  a disavowed symptom of automation myths” (29). That is, automation is not  merely nor necessarily about replacing or reducing work, but also about  strengthening capital’s power over human labor.
            The  book’s second part moves into a definition of “the myth of original  automation,” in a theoretical move that intentionally parallels and updates  Karl Marx’s critique of classical political economists’ myth of primitive  accumulation. In this part, Ramírez deconstructs automation mythologists’  “sanitized history” of past technological “development” in order to unveil the  historical realities of “dispossession and struggles around settler  colonialism, race, gender, and class” (34). In reexamining past examples of  “automation,” Ramírez’s argument can again be explained through two of his most  prominent and pedagogic illustrations. On the one hand, this part delves into  the anachronism that underlies assertions about farmers losing their “jobs” to  machinery, insofar as this projects the notion of wage labor into a context in  which labor was not fully market-dependent, but (at least partially, and within  patriarchal structures) aimed at subsistence and relative autonomy. By  rehearsing this old Marxian explanation, Ramírez wants to draw our attention  again to the fact that, historically, automation has not merely “replaced jobs”  or “freed labor”; instead, it has also generally gone hand in hand with acts of  dispossession, resulting in populations’ increased market dependence. On the  other hand, Ramírez also invites readers into reconsidering the role of slave  labor in American and capitalist history. Insofar as slaves’ bodies were  disciplined into performing mechanical labor with robotic efficiency for the  sake of capital accumulation, this attempt at “slavery’s automation” (40) would  be the unacknowledged predecessor of today’s technological automation. Thus,  Ramírez proposes that we think about American “techno-republicanism,” a  dominant project-ideology that “shares modern republicanism’s definition of  freedom as non-domination but repudiates the classical republican argument that  slavery is necessary for the citizen’s freedom.... [However] the  techno-republican doesn’t want to abolish slavery but technologize it” (41). In  this sense, Ramírez’s overall argument seems to cohere with one of Marx’s key  conclusions: that even if automation can potentially lighten or eliminate the  burdens of labor, it has historically been employed for the opposite, for  intensified domination.
            Part  III of Against Automation Mythologies proceeds in the way of Barthes’s  critique, as it is essentially a series of micro-essays, each of them focused  on a specific “Disenchanted Object”—that is, a particular technological  invention or project aimed at automation. This is the part of the book that  seemed—to this reviewer—most original and enjoyable, insofar as it enables the  reader to see “technoclastic” thinking in action, applied to a collection of  thoughtfully selected, relevant case studies. The first example is a failed  “son” of automation: the robot Baxter, a mechanical, humanoid co-worker which  would alleviate the human employee’s physical efforts. Backed by considerable  investment and trumpeted by automation prophets, the robot nonetheless  generated almost no demand and it was a business failure. Beside taking this as  an obvious proof against the feasibility of full automation, Ramírez  explains Baxter as an example of business sf falling into its own ideological  trap: because of actually believing that automation is about helping labor,  Baxter’s creators forgot that, in a capitalist economy, the only incentive to  automate would be to be able to fire workers. In this sense, “Baxter’s  economic impact was not capitalist enough” (51), as Ramírez slyly puts  it. The following two examples take a broader view and, in a different way,  emphasize automation’s character as a capitalist project, by focusing on the  automation strategies of Amazon and Uber, respectively. On the one hand,  Ramírez invites us to reassess Amazon’s warehouse system as an example of  automated Taylorism, aimed at a disciplining of human labor through  mechanization; on the other hand, Uber is criticized as a “science fiction”  that operates upon speculative means of “making its workers disappear” (65),  whether by means of legal fictions or through the ever-elusive development of  the self-driving car. 
            Subsequently,  the next two essays move back into a critique of specific technologies: the  smart home and the care robot, both of which illustrate how business sf is  concerned with automating reproduction as much as production. Ramírez’s  critique of the “smart home” specifically focuses on how, despite automation’s  utopian promise of reducing gendered housework to a minimum, the smart home—in  line with the effect of historical home appliances, as was once analyzed by Ruth  Schwartz Cowan’s More Work For Mother (1985)—both reifies housework and  even increases its intensity. Furthermore,
            
              in the smart home, social reproduction becomes a commodity  like any other, and capitalism’s hidden and disavowed condition of possibility  is smoothly integrated into it—for paying customers. In other words, the  smart home’s “solution” to the crisis of social reproduction simply assumes  that the crisis has already been solved and that Americans who are currently  working insecure jobs while providing for elderly family members and helping  kids with homework have magically acquired the means to pay for the homes,  devices, apps, and subscription services that will free them. (78)
            
            Ramírez makes a very similar argument with regard to care  robots in the next chapter, and it is my impression that his writing here is at  his most politically relevant and urgent. Discussing care robots, his argument  incorporates the complexities of racialized labor: “the science fiction of care  robots ... reiterates the techno-republican dream not of abolishing servitude,  but of perfecting it by technical means; not of recognizing and respecting the  labor of women and racialized others, but of robotically simulating it” (83).  In this regard, Ramírez shows not only how the commodified automation of  housework and care is a faux fix, he also makes it clear that automation  mythologies are, in the end, “boringly unimaginative” (85). 
            The  last of Ramírez’s short essays focuses on Watson, a computer designed to  contest and win on the Jeopardy! show. Watson is above all an AI  publicity stunt, as IBM acknowledged, but is also deeply symptomatic of the  logics of business sf. In a way that resembles the victories of IBM’s DeepBlue  and Google’s AlphaGo against chess and go champions, respectively, what  interests Ramírez is how Watson and similarly automated “intelligences” are a  reification of “the cultural authority of white male nerdiness” (88), giving  these machines a source of legitimation and authority. Having arrived at the end  of the book, it is not a surprise anymore to find out (yet again) that  automation does not do away with pre-existing structures of power; above all,  automation reenforces and reifies the axes of oppression that operate in  capitalist societies.
              
            The  book ends with a more hopeful, or at least ambivalent, conclusion. In a  self-conscious turn, Ramírez asks: “is there a ‘tender, open possibility’ in  automation myths that my technoclastic treatment of business sf has overlooked?  Have I, like Barthes, locked myself out of utopia?” (95). Here, mobilizing  Fredric Jameson’s dialectical approach to mass culture, Ramírez compensates for  his critical negativity by acknowledging that automation is not only  reification, but is necessarily also utopian—and in such ambivalence would lie  the potential for alternative, repoliticized imaginings of automation.  Clarifying that he sympathizes with Aaron Bastani’s idea of a Fully Automated  Luxury Communism, he nonetheless urges fellow leftist thinkers to avoid  building “a castle made of business sf sand” (99).
            Overall,  the achievement of Ramírez’s book is to have successfully estranged and  demystified hegemonic conceptions of technological “progress”that still persist  in contemporary automation discourses. Simply put, his achievement is to have  deautomated hegemonic ways of thinking automation. Beyond the book’s purposes,  Ramírez’s hope seems to be that once the future of automation is not seen as  already predetermined, it can be reopened for politically engaged, utopian speculation.  For anyone interested in critical-utopian thinking, Ramírez’s monograph should  prove reinvigorating and inspirational: a technoclasm that can blow up  automated modes of thinking.—Miguel Sebastián-Martín, Universidad de  Salamanca, Spain
            
            Delany’s Autumnal Anthology.
            Bill Wood, ed. On  Samuel R. Delany’s Dhalgren. Fantastic Books, 2021. 271 pp. $31.35 hc,  $21.99 pbk. 
            On  Samuel R. Delany’s Dhalgren is an eclectic collection of reviews, essays,  interviews, and one poem all relating to Delany’s most famous novel, published  in 1975. This anthology began its existence as a set of Xeroxed documents  relating to Dhalgren in Samuel Delany’s personal possession and stayed  that way for years before it was published. The book we have now exists thanks  to Bill Wood, Delany’s personal assistant, who helped to make some last-minute  additions to the anthology and prepared it for publication with Fantastic  Books. On Samuel R. Delany’s Dhalgren is arranged into six sections,  covering everything from some contemporary reviews of Dhalgren to its  relationship to various other texts, including John Ashbery’s “The Instruction  Manual” (1956) and Delany’s own Hogg (1995). These unusual additions  make this a unique collection that opens up a number of forgotten or otherwise  unexplored avenues into the world of Dhalgren scholarship. 
            One of  the most useful aspects of On Samuel R. Delany’s Dhalgren is that it  presents a fairly comprehensive timeline of Dhalgren’s reception history  through the twentieth century. The opening section is titled “Contemporary  Reviews, 1975-1976,” and in only seven reviews it does a good job of  demonstrating the variety of responses Dhalgren received when it was  first published. Dhalgren has long been established as an sf classic,  and it can be easy to forget what a controversy it kicked up in the sf  community when it first appeared. Wood’s anthology presents the range of that  controversy nicely, bookended in my mind by the reviews of two sf sf greats:  Theodore Sturgeon and Harlan Ellison. Sturgeon called Dhalgren “the very  best ever to come out of the science fiction field” (23), while Ellison with  signature Waldorf-and-Statlerian flare called it “an unrelenting bore of a  literary exercise afflicted with elephantiasis, anemia of ideas and  malnutrition of plot and character development. It is a master talent run  amuck, suiciding endlessly for chapter after chapter of turgid, impenetrable  prose” (21). I also appreciate the inclusion of a review in a college newspaper  by Steven Paley and a review in The New York Times by Gerald Jonas;  these demonstrate the interest that   college-aged and general audiences had in Dhalgren, and it was  these audiences more than genre readers who were responsible for its initial  commercial success.
            Following  the contemporary reviews is a short section of reviews for Dhalgren’s  1996 Wesleyan UP reprint. This documents how Dhalgren over time was  eventually canonized as an sf classic and also picked up the imprimatur of  serious academic literature. Wood’s anthology also includes a small selection  of “Critical Reactions” from the scholarly literature on Dhalgren,with  an emphasis on its narrative structure and use of language. Delany’s own  critical writings on Dhalgren, included in the anthology under the  section “Delany on Dhalgren,” also put a predominant focus on structure,  sign, and myth. Additionally, this section documents Delany’s peculiar history  of oblique Dhalgren criticism. Delany has proven that he has quite a lot  to say about the novel, but he always does so through the proxy of  either penname or metacommentary.
            Beyond  just documenting Dhalgren’s own reception history, the collection also  invites comparison with three intriguing sources that are not much talked about  in Dhalgren scholarship: John Ashbery’s “The Instruction Manual,” G.  Spencer Brown’s Laws of Form (1969), and Delany’s Hogg.  “The Instruction Manual” is reproduced in full under a section titled  “Sources,” and the collection explains its inclusion by stating that Delany’s  encounter with it in the early 1970s “resulted in a major restructuring of Dhalgren’s  material” (139). In the “Critical Reactions” section there is an essay by  Kenneth James called “Subverted Equations,” in which James discusses Delany’s  connection to G. Spencer Brown’s Laws of Form, an obscure  mathematical-philosophical work, and attempts to demonstrate the influence of  that work on Dhalgren and Delany’s Return to Nevèrÿon series  (1979-1987). Finally, the collection ends with an interview with Delany about  the making of Hogg, his (in)famous pornographic novel. Delany discusses  how he wrote Hogg at the same time that he wrote Dhalgren and  says that “it took place in the same city, except that it had a waterfront....  Bellona is the same city minus the waterfront” (250). In Dhalgren, the  character Tak theorizes that something bad must have happened to Bellona’s  swamp; I like to think that the author temporarily flooded it to set the scene  for Hogg.
            Dhalgren has a fascinating mini-history of cover designs, suggesting the ways that  publishers have tried to frame “the riddle never meant to be solved” (10)  contained within, and I appreciated the inclusion of many of these covers. The  anthology contains the original cover from Bantam Books (10), which makes heavy  use of sf imagery and Delany’s credentials as a genre writer to package Dhalgren as a more conventional sf novel than it actually is. The more staid covers from  the Wesleyan University Press (42) and Vintage Books (146) reprints both “say  ‘literature’ louder than ‘science fiction’” (47) and demonstrate how, contrary  to Bantam Books, these presses tried to distance Dhalgren from its roots  in genre fiction. 
            The  cover for On Samuel R. Delany’s Dhalgren is notable in its own right. It  presents a photomontaged picture of Bellona and its two moons digitally  stitched together from stock images. This is appropriate enough, given that  Bellona was created by cobbling together any number of American cities in the  author’s imagination, but the style itself is associated with  semi-professional, independent small presses and is fairly contemporary—much  newer, anyway, than any of the documents actually contained in the book. The  cover also names Bill Wood as the only editor, which is peculiar, since it is  an open secret that Delany himself had a large hand in the project.  Interestingly, this seems to continue Delany’s history of writing oblique Dhalgren commentary, documented in the book’s own “Delany on Dhalgren”  section. 
            On  Samuel R. Delany’s Dhalgren presents a unique and often compelling  collection of material, but the editorial apparatus for curating that material  is somewhat wanting. Images such as the covers I mentioned above are inserted  without any explanatory captions, the section introductions make errors and  sometimes feel incomplete, and the anthology is in need of a general  introduction to explain its goals. The anthology’s muddled use of editorial  voice is also problematic. Most of the section introductions talk about Delany in  the third person, but then in the introduction for “The Making of Hogg” it  mysteriously reverts to Delany speaking in the first person about his history  with the novel. The anthology’s footnotes are particularly bad about this, with  footnotes from the original author mixed in with comments in the voice of the  anthology editor and comments in the voice of Delany himself, with no  consistent system for distinguishing among them. The astute reader may note  that this unclear mixture of multiple voices gives the book a texture not  entirely unlike Dhalgren itself. This technique worked better in the  source text, however, and a little more scholarly polish would go a long way if  the book is ever released in a new edition. 
            These  quibbles aside, On Samuel R. Delany’s Dhalgren is a worthy, not to  mention deeply personal, collection of work. Despite its contemporary design  and the name of the young man on its cover,this is undoubtedly a work  of age. It bears the undeniable imprimatur of Delany’s archive and his voice,  and that voice carries the tone of a man taking accounts. It is not a book you  should go to if you are looking for the most comprehensive or up-to-date Dhalgren scholarship; only one of the essays here was written during the current  century, and even that piece, Delany’s “Looking Back at the Autumnal City,” is  gazing at the past. Rather, the anthology should be valued as a history of  those flashes of insight that both inspired and were inspired by Dhalgren.  It is a Xerox record of the stars that once shone over Bellona’s sometime  waterfront.—A.J. Rocca, Western Illinois University
             Back to Home
    Back to Home