Understanding William Gibson
eBook - ePub

Understanding William Gibson

Gerald Alva Miller, Jr., Linda Wagner-Martin

Share book
  1. 168 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Understanding William Gibson

Gerald Alva Miller, Jr., Linda Wagner-Martin

Book details
Book preview
Table of contents
Citations

About This Book

A study of the science fiction author who popularized the concept of cyberspace

Gerald Alva Miller Jr.'s Understanding William Gibson is a thoughtful examination of the life and work of William Gibson, author of eleven novels and twenty short stories. Gibson is the recipient of many notable awards for science fiction writing including the Nebula, Hugo, and Philip K. Dick awards. Gibson's iconic novel, Neuromancer, popularized the concept of cyberspace. With his early stories and his first trilogy of novels, Gibson became the father figure for a new genre of science fiction called "cyberpunk" that brought a gritty realism to its cerebral plots involving hackers and artificial intelligences.

This study situates Gibson as a major figure in both science fiction history and contemporary American fiction, and it traces how his aesthetic affected both areas of literature. Miller follows a brief biographical sketch and a survey of the works that influenced him with an examination that divides Gibson's body of work into early stories, his three major novel trilogies, and his standalone works. Miller does not confine his study to major works but instead also delves into Gibson's obscure stories, published and unpublished screenplays, major essays, and collaborations with other authors.

Miller's exploration starts by connecting Gibson to the major countercultural movements that influenced him (the Beat Generation, the hippies, and the punk rock movement) while also placing him within the history of science fiction and examining how his early works reacted against contemporaneous trends in the genre. These early works also exhibit the development of his unique aesthetic that would influence science fiction and literature more generally. Next a lengthy chapter explicates his groundbreaking Sprawl Trilogy, which began with Neuromancer.

Miller then traces Gibson's aesthetic transformations across his two subsequent novel trilogies that increasingly eschew distant futures either to focus on our contemporary historical moment as a kind of science fiction itself or to imagine technological singularities that might lie just around the corner. These chapters detail how Gibson's aesthetic has morphed along with social, cultural, and technological changes in the real world. The study also looks at such standalone works as his collaborative steampunk novel, his attempts at screenwriting, his major essays, and even his experimental hypertext poetry. The study concludes with a discussion of Gibson's lasting influence and a brief examination of his most recent novel, The Peripheral, which signals yet another radical change in Gibson's aesthetic.

Frequently asked questions

How do I cancel my subscription?
Simply head over to the account section in settings and click on “Cancel Subscription” - it’s as simple as that. After you cancel, your membership will stay active for the remainder of the time you’ve paid for. Learn more here.
Can/how do I download books?
At the moment all of our mobile-responsive ePub books are available to download via the app. Most of our PDFs are also available to download and we're working on making the final remaining ones downloadable now. Learn more here.
What is the difference between the pricing plans?
Both plans give you full access to the library and all of Perlego’s features. The only differences are the price and subscription period: With the annual plan you’ll save around 30% compared to 12 months on the monthly plan.
What is Perlego?
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1 million books across 1000+ topics, we’ve got you covered! Learn more here.
Do you support text-to-speech?
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more here.
Is Understanding William Gibson an online PDF/ePUB?
Yes, you can access Understanding William Gibson by Gerald Alva Miller, Jr., Linda Wagner-Martin in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literatur & Literaturkritik in Science-Fiction. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

CHAPTER 1
Understanding William Gibson
Born on March 17, 1948, William Ford Gibson is often given the moniker “father of cyberpunk,” the subgenre of science fiction (or sci-fi or SF) that focuses on computer information systems, corporate control, and hyperurbanized spaces. Ironically, Gibson’s early years were not spent in an urban environment or in an area known for technological advancement. Born in the coastal town of Conway, South Carolina, he spent the bulk of his childhood in Wytheville, a small Virginia town in the Appalachian Mountains (Dellinger 1). As Andrew Ross and Scott Bukatman discuss, many of the major cyberpunk authors also hailed unexpectedly from southern locales instead of from the major northern cities one might expect. Bruce Sterling, John Shirley, and Rudy Rucker, for example, were born in Brownsville, Texas; Houston, Texas; and Louisville, Kentucky, respectively.1 Despite his rural upbringing, Gibson became a dual citizen of Canada and the United States and a critic and visionary of the digital age.
From the Rural to the Virtual: A Brief Chronology of Gibson’s Life
Gibson spent his first eight years in various parts of the South. His father, William Ford Gibson, Jr., managed a construction company that did plumbing work at Oak Ridge, where “the first atomic bomb was built” (Feller). Gibson’s father died when the boy was eight, after which he and his mother, Elizabeth Otey, moved back to her hometown of Wytheville, Virginia (Feller). Because his mother was the town librarian, Gibson developed an early passion for books, and his writing style was influenced equally by sources as diverse as hard-boiled crime authors such as Raymond Chandler and postmodern novelists such as Thomas Pynchon (Dellinger 1). But it was the Classics Illustrated comic book version of The Time Machine that led Gibson to H. G. Wells’s original novel and the genre of science fiction (Feller). At this time in the 1950s and 1960s, Gibson was inundated by science fiction from all sides. Gibson developed a “voracious reading” habit that included Philip K. Dick’s classic The Man in the High Castle (1962), as well as “other major science fiction writers of the 1950s, including Alfred Bester, [Robert A.] Heinlein, and Theodor Sturgeon” (WGW 11). Television also bombarded him with sci-fi in the form of shows such as Tom Corbett, Space Cadet (1950–55), The Mysterious Dr. Satan (1940), and The Twilight Zone (1959-64), and he found even more sci-fi in genre magazines such as Galaxy (WGW 10-11). However, Gibson soon discovered an author who would forever transform his outlook not just on science fiction but also on the potential of literature more generally—William S. Burroughs.
Gibson’s discovery of Burroughs came at an opportune time—right before his departure from Wytheville. When he was fifteen years old, his mother sent him to a school in Tucson, Arizona, called the Southern Arizona School for Boys (WGLC 7). As Gibson explains in his biographical essay “Since 1948” on his website, he made an important discovery before leaving Wytheville: “I had stumbled, in my ceaseless quest for more and/or better science fiction, on a writer named Burroughs—not Edgar Rice but William S., and with him had come his colleagues Kerouac and Ginsberg
. The effect, over the next few years, was to make me, at least in terms of my Virginia home, Patient Zero of what would later be called the counterculture” (DTPF 22–23). Burroughs showed Gibson the possibilities of combining science-fictional plots with experimental aesthetics, and he also introduced the teenager to a world of hustlers, con artists, and drug addicts that helped shape the plots of Gibson’s early works.
When he arrived at the Arizona school, Gibson recounts that he “began the forced invention of a less Lovecraftian persona” (DTPF 22–23). Gibson suggests that his acquaintance with the Beat Generation helped him experiment with one identity after another in an attempt to find himself. Then, another tragedy occurred that shaped Gibson’s life: his mother died suddenly when he was only eighteen. During this time at school, Gibson began smoking marijuana and frequenting countercultural locations, such as coffeehouses and folk music venues. He was consequently expelled from school and sent back home to Wytheville to live with relatives. Another turning point came when he was called before the local draft board, causing Gibson to leave Wytheville and journey, like so many other young American men during this time period, to Canada to avoid being drafted to fight in the Vietnam War (WGW 15–16). In “Since 1948,” Gibson characterizes this period of his life by saying that he “joined up with the rest of the Children’s Crusade of the day and shortly found myself in Canada, a country I knew almost nothing about. I concentrated on avoiding the draft and staying alive, while trying to make sure that I looked like I was enjoying the Summer of Love” (DTPF 23). He “was at once drawn to hippie culture and repelled by it, and he was certainly no idealist or revolutionary,” yet the Summer of Love proved to be auspicious for him nonetheless (WGLC 36).
Generally considered the high point of the hippie era, the Summer of Love occurred in 1967, a year that witnessed the release of many of the most influential works of psychedelic rock: the self-titled debuts of the Doors, the Grateful Dead, and David Bowie; the Beatles’ pair of LSD-fueled albums, Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band and Magical Mystery Tour; Jefferson Airplane’s Surrealistic Pillow; Pink Floyd’s first album, Pipers at the Gates of Dawn; the Velvet Underground’s genre-shattering The Velvet Underground & Nico; and the Jimi Hendrix Experience’s Are You Experienced. This music provided a background that was simultaneously poetic, revolutionary, surrealistic, and consistently obsessed with the ideas of space and mind exploration. During this period, Gibson lived in a hippie neighborhood of Toronto called Yorkville and even appeared as a guide and narrator in a documentary called Yorkville: Hippie Haven (1967) for the Canadian Broadcasting Company. He returned to the United States for two years, participated in protests in Washington, D.C., and attended the Woodstock music festival in 1969, an experience that he appears to have found thoroughly repellent. Gibson was even in northern California during the ill-fated Altamont Free Concert (WGLC 8).2 While Gibson came of age during the hippie era, he remained skeptical and pessimistic about it, and another musical generation would provide a much more profound influence on him.
Gibson’s period of youthful experimentation began to wane when he returned to Toronto and met his future wife, Deborah Thompson. The couple spent a year traveling in Europe together before returning to Canada where she could resume her university studies. They wed in 1972 and began living in Vancouver, where Deborah completed her B.A. and M.A. degrees at the University of British Columbia (WGLC 8). Gibson also became an English major at the University of British Columbia, and Professor Susan Wood’s science fiction course directly impacted his career as a writer. Wood prompted Gibson to submit a short story as his final class project instead of a final term paper. With her support, in 1977, Gibson published his first story, “Fragments of a Hologram Rose,” in the short-lived science fiction magazine Unearth, a periodical that also featured the first publication of fellow cyberpunk Rudy Rucker (WGO 5). In 1977 Gibson completed his collegiate studies, and Deborah gave birth to their first son, Graeme (WGLC 9). Despite publishing a story, Gibson lacked confidence in himself as a writer until he met Bruce Sterling, a fellow devotee of William S. Burroughs, punk music, and sci-fi. Sterling had already published a novel called Involution Ocean (1977), and his promptings helped persuade Gibson to try writing as a full-time profession (WGO 5; WGLC 9).
Gibson was mostly a stay-at-home father, which allowed him to experiment with his writing, leading to a banner year in 1981. That year witnessed the publication of four stories, two of them in Omni magazine, one of the premiere venues for cutting-edge sci-fi. “The Gernsback Continuum” and “Johnny Mnemonic,” in particular, began to truly build his reputation. In 1982 he published “Burning Chrome” (also in Omni), which more fully developed the Sprawl from “Johnny Mnemonic” and featured the first use of the word “cyberspace.” During 1981 and 1982, Gibson also began writing his first novel, having already secured a contract with the legendary sci-fi editor Terry Carr of Ace Books. Gibson continued publishing stories while writing his novel: “Hippie Hat Brain Parasite” and “Red Star, Winter Orbit,” his first collaboration with Bruce Sterling, both appeared in 1983 (WGW 19).
Another crucial moment in the history of cyberpunk occurred in 1983 at a science fiction convention in Amarillo, Texas, where a panel titled “Behind the Mirrorshades: A Look at Punk SF” featured Gibson, John Shirley, Bruce Sterling, and Lewis Shiner (WGLC 10). This panel set the stage for Gibson’s future success; however, it was the year 1984, already tinged with sci-fi resonance because of George Orwell’s classic dystopian novel Nineteen Eighty-Four (1949), that forever changed Gibson’s career. July 1984 saw the publication of his short story “New Rose Hotel” and the publication of his first novel, Neuromancer, which landed with a resounding bang, garnering all three of the major science fiction awards for the year: the Hugo, the Nebula, and the Philip K. Dick award. It was the first novel to receive this trifecta of accolades. Gibson published two more short stories in 1985 before temporarily abandoning the medium to focus on his novels. Coauthored with Michael Swanwick, “Dogfight” first appeared in Omni, and Gibson’s final ’80s short story, “The Winter Market,” appeared in the November 1985 issue of Vancouver Magazine. Gibson would not publish another story until 1990 because the bulk of his energy went toward publishing two sequels to Neuromancer.
As evidenced by the last line of Neuromancer, Gibson never intended for Neuromancer to develop into a trilogy, but Neuromancer’s popularity and critical success and the various bids for a film adaptation (none of which ever materialized) convinced Gibson to write a sequel, resulting in 1986’s Count Zero (WGO 85). The novel further developed the universe of the Sprawl by introducing almost entirely new characters. In the novel, Gibson experimented with a new narrative structure featuring alternating chapters that focused on different characters whose story lines would later converge toward the climax. He has continued to experiment with this form throughout the rest of his career. Gibson rounded out the “Sprawl Trilogy” with Mona Lisa Overdrive (1988) before beginning to pursue alternate interests, particularly in Hollywood.
In this interstice between Gibson’s “Sprawl Trilogy” and his “Bridge Trilogy,” he worked on a variety of projects: Hollywood screenplays, digital poetry, and a collaborative novel with Bruce Sterling. This period represented a stage of experimentation for Gibson before he returned to his predominant mode—writing novels. His next major work was the collaborative steampunk novel The Difference Engine (1990), which he coauthored with fellow cyberpunk Bruce Sterling. An alternative history or counterfactual novel, The Difference Engine reimagines Victorian England and such major historical figures as Ada Lovelace and Charles Babbage and remains a highly respected example of the steampunk genre. Gibson also tried to produce various unrealized adaptations of his story “Burning Chrome” and was briefly attached to a film called Neuro-Hotel, with Katherine Bigelow slated to direct. He completed a script for Alien3, which would have been the follow-up to Ridley Scott’s classic Alien (1979) and James Cameron’s action-packed sequel Aliens (1986), but almost nothing remained from Gibson’s script when David Fincher’s Alien3 (1992) finally appeared. Gibson’s Alien3 script has never been officially released but can easily be found online (WGW 91).
Gibson did have one successful foray into screenwriting with the adaptation of his story “Johnny Mnemonic,” which was turned into a major Hollywood film with his friend Robert Longo as director and a cast that included Keanu Reeves, Ice-T, Henry Rollins, and Rutger Hauer. The film features most of the story’s basic elements, but Gibson added to the story in order to flesh it out to feature length. The period also produced one other highly influential and original piece of work: Agrippa: A Book of the Dead (1992). Agrippa was released as a truly multimedia and collaborative text containing a book filled with artwork from Dennis Ashbaugh and a 3.5-inch floppy disk that featured a three-hundred-line poem by Gibson that encrypted itself and became unreadable after one reading. One of the great works of electronic, digital literature, Agrippa has remained an object of speculation and mystery since its publication in 1992.
Gibson’s next novel eschewed the far-flung settings of the “Sprawl Trilogy” and instead depicted a future only barely extrapolated from the present. This novel would spawn its own trilogy that dealt much less with cyberspace and much more with people’s attempts to exist in a media-saturated, economically depressed, and corporate-controlled world. Gibson first introduced this world in the short story “Skinner’s Room” (1990), which was originally part of a San Francisco art exhibit. The story subsequently became the basis for his next novel, Virtual Light, which appeared in 1993 and was followed by two sequels. Generally referred to as the “Bridge Trilogy,” Virtual Light, Idoru (1997), and All Tomorrow’s Parties (1999) explore a world only slightly different from the one of the 1990s, a world in which earthquakes, plagues, and economic crises rocked the planet while reality television and celebrity obsession reached shockingly new and even religious heights. These novels show Gibson beginning to distance himself from traditional sci-fi, and they serve as a “bridge” in his career as well because they provide a transition to his most recent trilogy, which is set in our present world. Gibson rounded out his writing in the 1990s with a host of interesting nonfiction essays for magazines including Wired, several more short stories, and two coauthored episodes of the popular sci-fi/horror television series The X-Files (1993–2002).
In the 2000s Gibson quit publishing traditional science fiction altogether and began writing novels set in the present; however, certain critics maintain that these works constitute alternate versions of our present. His most recent trilogy, usually called the “Bigend Trilogy” or the “Blue Ant Trilogy,” was published between 2003 and 2010 and deals with major historical events such as the September 11 terrorist attacks, the Iraq War, and the 2007 financial crisis. The first novel in the trilogy, Pattern Recognition (2003), received accolades, and its two follow-ups (Spook Country [2007] and Zero History [2010]) also garnered generally positive reviews. The novels increasingly downplay technology in favor of exploring power and the growing sense of quotidian estrangement in the twenty-first century.
Since marrying Deborah, Gibson has led a rather calm personal life, and he has admitted that he prefers to stay home most of the time, traveling to only a select few destinations that he loves. He retains dual-citizenship in the United States and Canada and maintained a blog in the first decade of the twenty-first century but eventually migrated to Twitter, to which he posts on a regular basis. Despite a rather turbulent and countercultural beginning, William Gibson, the postmodern prophet of the cyber age, is actually a rather normal, everyday man who continues to regularly publish novels and articles and consents to interviews upon publisher coercion. His works demonstrate a steady evolution in terms of style, and he remains one of the most consistently fascinating postmodern authors as he continually adapts his style and plots to technological advancements and changes in the sociocultural landscape. Over the course of this study, we will see how his style has metamorphosed in response to the real world and how everyday reality has increasingly become a kind of science fiction itself.
High vs. Low Culture: Gibson’s Influences and Aesthetic
To fully appreciate Gibson’s place in contemporary literature, some initial explication is required to situate him in the spectrum of twentieth- and twenty-first-century literature. A cutting-edge phenomenon in the 1980s, cyberpunk was declared dead or passĂ© by the end of the decade; nevertheless, the themes of the genre continue to appear in Gibson’s later works. Therefore, one must understand how postmodern literature influenced cyberpunk, how cyberpunk itself epitomized postmodern literature, and how cyberpunk remains influential despite having been absorbed into commercial culture and hence stripped of its virile subversiveness. In many ways, cyberpunk represents the postmodern genre par excellence because it thoroughly embodies the disintegration of the boundaries between high and low culture and directly engages with how the simulacrum—the copy without an original—and the crisis of representation have shaped not only our culture but also our relation to knowledge, ethics, and truth. Simultaneously, it imagines the outcome of the ongoing mutation of capitalism. As Fredric Jameson comments, “cyberpunk [is] the supreme literary expression if not of postmodernism, then of late capitalism itself” (Postmodernism 419n1). Such themes began to appear in literature during the years following World War II as the dreams of modernity seemed to die in the face of horrors such as the Holocaust and the atomic bomb. Postmodern authors began to interrogate the nature of truth and value; therefore, to fully appreciate Gibson’s works, it helps to have some basic grasp of the transition from modernity to postmodernity.
To start, one must understand the distinction between modernity and modernism. Although these terms receive varying definitions and histories depending upon the critic, theorist, or philosopher, we can lay out some basic principles to help simultaneously differentiate the two concepts and provide the necessary juxtaposition of ideas to understand “the postmodern turn,” as Fredric Jameson terms it. Modernism and Postmodernism refer to historical designations in literature and art more generally. On the other hand, modernity and postmodernity represent both historical periods and philosophical approaches. While moderni...

Table of contents