Neuromancer Essay

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    and technology advancements as seen through the space lens, megacorporations verses a dystopian gritty underworld, and the anti-hero protagonist in Alfred Bester’ The Stars My Destination are echoed and further refined in William Gibson’s novel Neuromancer solidifying the cyberpunk subgenre. Women also have more respect and prevalence in Gibson’s later book. Both novels portray the rise of a rough outsider male protagonist against forces much larger than him as made possible through the novel’s dark

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    Cyberpunk Definitional Paper

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    person is human and how much of them are machine is not so clear. Now humans have lost the ability to control thier technology. Another important feature of cyberpunk is the integration of everyday events and items that affect people the most. In Neuromancer, Gibson allows chase to go in to a bar and have a beer. This may not be an overly exciting event, one that many people do every day, but the

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    about things that you might be interested in. Since using our phones and seeing ads are so familiar to us, we don’t truly realize how the government and media outlets are manipulating and spying on us. Works of fiction such as The Truman Show and Neuromancer, have attempted to defamiliarize these concepts by showing them at work on a larger scale. Both protagonists, Truman and Case, respectively, have fallen victim to manipulated realities and unauthorized surveillance. Authority figures, in these works

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    Sinister Fruitiness Essay

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    Peter Kuzmin Michael Johnstone/ Christine Choi ENG237H1 November 5, 2014 Technology as a Gender-Deconstructing Tool in Postmodern Neuromancer As we continue our march through the technological age, it is easy to see how technologies have affected all parts of our day-to-day lives. In “Sinister Fruitiness,” Stevens writes about how pervasive technologies have changed human existence in developed countries. Written in the mid-90s, before the real surge of internet and digital innovation

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    Soma In Brave New World

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    In many respects, the story of the development of human society can be read as a story of technological development. Such a reading might mean interpreting the term technology fairly broadly, however. While this word's everyday use often connotes gadgets and devices, it is also possible to use this term to refer to the use of scientific knowledge to develop innovations that have practical uses (Oxford English Dictionary Online). Thus, in the same way that we think of airplanes as a technology for

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    being the object to be won by the hero. William Gibson’s “razor girl”, Molly Millions from Neuromancer, breaks away from that stereotype. Gibson writes Molly as being physically and emotionally tough, cold and lethal instead of warm and nurturing. This paper will draw upon comparisons from James Tiptree’s characters P. Burke and Delphi from “The Girl Who Was Plugged In” as well as other characters from Neuromancer to

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    possibilities; it makes us think.” Today we’ll be exploring that difference as it’s represented within the very genre itself, mutating from its origins in Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels, to become Scott’s Blade Runner, and the virtual reality of Gibson’s Neuromancer. As represented in Pohl’s Day Million and Sandberg’s Kung Fury, Sci-Fi as an ever-evolving

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    like the Oankali’s, is the key to saving the human race from destroying ourselves and our planet in the nuclear age. We will see how this idea of a higher or combined consciousness has played a role in other literature, like the cyber network in Neuromancer, and the controlled consciousness of The Matrix 1999 movie. In Butler’s Xenogenesis series, the Oankali believe that the humans’ hierarchal tendency will eventually result in our

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    The Women of Cyberpunk Women have always been on the fringes of the science fiction writing community. Not only have there been few female writers, but few female characters of substance have explored the universe, battled aliens, or discovered new technologies. Even in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1818), considered by some to be the first science fiction novel, Elizabeth, who is the major female character, does little more than decorate Victor's arm, snag his heart, and eventually contribute

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    Idoru Idoru by william gibson is nothing less than an awe-insiring book for me. no other author that i have come across can inspire one to recreate visions of reality at the turn of every page. Gibsons books are all compelling; neuromancer (1984) needing perhaps a special mention; as this book single handedly created the cyberpunk genre, aswell as coining phrases such as "cyberspace". However, as one of his later works (1996), we are able to find within Idoru's more contempory exploration of

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