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January 2005 :: issue 15
 
 
 
Books This Month
1. Eastern Standard Tribe by Doctorow
2. Close to the Machine by Ullman
3. Critical Path by Fuller
Massive Change by Mau
4. Pattern Recognition by Gibson
5. Runaway by Munro
6. Miwa Yanagi by Yanagi
  Feature: ChangeThis
Book News
Credits/About Us

The Future Issue
The future is now. And don't just take it from us: read Doctorow's vision of a world reorganized around time; get closer to the machine with Ullman; compare and contrast the grand views of Fuller and Mau; understand the global speed of Gibson; enter into the visions of Yanagi; run away with Munro; or write your own manifesto. Options abound — it's all up to you.

 
 

  Inspired by the glamour, energy, and sophistication of the 1920s, the Nokia Fashion Collection fuses art, fashion, and technology. They've created wearable art and the ultimate objects of desire. Come browse the Collection on the online boutique, www.NokiaInStyle.com.  

 
 
FICTION: SCIENCE FICTION
Eastern Standard Tribe
by Cory Doctorow

Published: 2004
Pages: 224
Publisher: Tor Books

Links:
EST site
Synopsis
The next chapter of cyberpunk — technology is just about figured out, but for our hero, the compounded jet-lag of living in the Global Village is so brutal that his truest allegience is to his time zone. Or is it?

Review
In the world of Cory Doctorow's second sci-fi novel, Eastern Standard Tribe, which is clearly crafted with a true geek's sense of accuracy, technology has moved forward incrementally and in ways that feel realistic. But technology itself is no longer the big issue — living with it is. Your loyalties now are not to your nation or your corporation, or to where you're at or from, but to the inevitable circadian rhythms of your time zone. Our hero, Art Berry, has figured out a scheme to make vast quantities of money for his Eastern Standard Tribe, but it hinges on his current sabotage mission infiltrating the Greenwich Mean Tribe. But he must figure out who to trust (including himself), and on what basis?

If this book has a major weakness, it's that it sometimes doesn't feel like Doctorow's creating an entire universe so much as he's reporting on one — not surprising, since his real world is wired to the teeth: Doctorow travels the globe as European Coordinator for the EFF and gives talks on Digital Rights Management (like this one, which has probably been translated into far more languages than his fiction). He is also one of the core minds behind Boing Boing, and, at his own website, he makes all of his books available digitally, for free — pushing the DIY ethos of the original cyber and punk cultures to yet a new level, and self-consciously laying a groundwork for the future of literature. But his work is all of a piece, and the world between the covers of EST is infinitely more satisfying when taken in the context of the whole digital universe he has created around himself.

The future has caught up with the visions of the original cyberpunk writers — their virtual communities, online identities, encrypted data packets, communication gadgets, and rampant digital viruses are all here — and now the future's uncharted territory is about intellectual property and copyright protection. Many of the original cyberpunk crew have retreated to the present and the past, while Cory Doctorow has stepped up to the future. (OZ)


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NONFICTION: MEMOIR
Close to the Machine: Technophilia and Its Discontents
by Ellen Ullman

Published: 1997
Pages: 189
Publisher: City Lights Books

Links:
Review (Salon)

Interview (SF Gate)

Bio
Synopsis
Mixing memoir with tech manifesto, Ellen Ullman explores the personal, professional, and philosophical ramifications of living in the pressure cooker of Silicon Valley.

Review
As a fortysomething female (and former communist) running an independent computer programming business, Ellen Ullman offers a unique perspective on the mid-'90s dot-com boom in her brilliant memoir/tech treatise, Close to the Machine. It's a rare feat for an author to mix personal memoir with a penetrating social critique successfully, but Ullman, writing both of her private and professional experiences as a techie and as a woman, manages to straddle this line eloquently.

Examining the relationship between human and machine, Ullman provides an insider's look at the computer industry and those mysterious programmers who keep everything humming, while examining her own sexual adventures and responses to personal obstacles beyond the the workplace. In writing about a world in which not much happens outside of the quiet human/machine interface, with strings of 1s and 0s standing in for reality, she nevertheless manages to bring life to the process of coding. Having worked as a computer programmer since the late '70s, Ullman charts how the constant flux in the computing industry — learning new languages that are sure to become outdated soon enough — is both similar to, and distinct from, the changing languages of human interaction.

In revealing her private life so openly, she provides an interesting foil for the pure logic of computer programming. At the same time she examines the often muddled relationship between the professional and personal, and how this line has been consistently blurred in recent years. In the end she provides no answers, as there are likely none to give, but her journey provides an insightful and thoroughly entertaining philosophical memoir. (PM)




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NONFICTION
Critical Path
by R. Buckminster Fuller

Published: 1981
Pages: 471
Publisher: St. Martins Press

Links:
The Buckminster Fuller Institute

Buckminster Fuller FAQs

 

Massive Change
by Bruce Mau

Published: 2004
Pages: 240
Publisher: Phaidon Press

Links:
The Mau Atelier

Massive Change website

Synopsis
A comparison of Mau's new Massive Change and Fuller's seminal Critical Path — two books that take on the challenge of examining the future of information and culture.

Review
When architect-designer-theorist R. Buckminster Fuller published Critical Path in 1982 — a year before his death — he summed up a life's work theorizing about the crises that face humanity, and cemented his reputation as one of the planet's most innovative thinkers. In addition to inventing the geodesic dome and the Dymaxion world map, Fuller is known for a unique philosophy anchored in both individuality and sustainability — the latter being a radical notion at the time.

Critical Path is a trove of futurist thinking that predicts, among other things, the ubiquity of computers; but the bulk of its ideas remain dormant, still awaiting discovery. Some theories, such as his declaration that Southeast Asia is the true cradle of human civilization, are thrilling if yet unproven. Others, such as the viability of the geodesic doming of midtown Manhattan, sound as attractive today as ever. The book reads like an amalgam of Fuller's life and work, which influenced generations of creators, including leading Toronto-based designer-theorist Bruce Mau, whose Institute Without Boundaries (IWB) takes on Fuller's challenge to forge a new breed of designer.

With the publication of Massive Change, Bruce Mau and IWB launched their own future-forward design philosophy. The appropriately named Massive Change project, of which the book is a fragment, includes a traveling exhibit, an evolving website, a radio program, and a slew of other components. The book itself is a compendium of insight from some of today's leading sages on sustainability. Binding ideas to their economic lives, individual chapters on urbanization, movement, energy, information, image, market, material, military, manufacturing, living, wealth, and politics tackle the question of not what we do but how we do it.

It is reassuring to see two books by leading visual thinkers fearlessly engaging the issues faced by present and future designers. Although Fuller and Mau take some different approaches, both refuse to see their mega-projects as part of some sort of utopian futurism, but instead, as viable solutions couched in pragmatism. Subverting Timothy Leary's '60s axiom to "Turn On, Tune In, Drop Out," Massive Change's website shouts: 1. Learn, 2. Act. (HV)


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FICTION: SCIENCE FICTION
Pattern Recognition
by William Gibson

Published: 2003
Pages: 368
Publisher: G. P. Putnam's Sons

Links:
Gibson blog
Synopsis
An American marketing guru attempts to reconcile her private artistic obsession with the commodity-focused global marketplace as she drifts jet-lagged through the "mirror world" of London, Moscow, and Tokyo.

Review
William Gibson exerted untold influence on what was then the future with his 1984 novel, Neuromancer, which added "cyberspace" to the English language. His latest work, Pattern Recognition, is not technically a novel about the future; it is Gibson's wide-eyed, wondering look at the seamless, hyper-speed world we live in today. Protagonist Cayce Pollard flits ghostlike through hotel lobbies and airport causeways in the London, Tokyo, and Moscow of 2002. Cayce is a "cool-hunter," a marketing specialist with an "allergy" to bad or oversaturated branding — prolonged exposure to say, Tommy Hilfiger products, causes her to break out in hives. Multinational corporations hire her to vet logo redesigns and product launches, or, from the street level, to scout and report on emerging trends — pattern recognition.

Gibson uses the ubiquity of the internet as a jumping-off point for an exploration of the now as the future we've been waiting to live. He uses "Google" as a verb; his characters have alternate web-based identities, "neighborhoods" and friends, and use these communities in much the same way as characters in novels of the 19th century use their local churches. As a freelance employee of a multinational marketing firm, Cayce is afforded the kind of luxury that a company Visa card with no credit limit can provide — first class flights and hotels, gadgets, and good food.

Gibson is both idolizing and lampooning the level of fanatical specialization our society now holds as de rigueur — Cayce's jacket of choice, for example, is a copy of a US military issue flight jacket, reproduced by detail-obsessed Japanese artisans. Cayce eventually finds herself spearheading the search for the source of the ultimate collector's cultural artifact — mysterious video footage that has been appearing on the internet, hinting at but never delivering greater meaning. Stop waiting for flying cars and laser guns, Gibson seems to be saying, the future has arrived. (BB)


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FICTION: STORIES
Runaway
by Alice Munro

Published: 2004
Pages: 352
Publisher: Knopf
Synopsis
In eight finely tuned stories, Munro presents women of all ages as they drift through life and relationships, marked by old age or apathy, and in the hope of finding something new and better.

Review
Runaway proves, once again, that Alice Munro is a master of the short story. Offering tales that are somewhat longer than traditional short stories and plumbing emotional depths, Munro spares nothing in her exploration of the female psyche and the forces that shape it. In the title story, a young woman is bound to her surly and lazy husband in an unhappy life. When given an opportunity to create an alternate future, she quickly jumps at the chance, only to have her husband pick her up at a bus station later that day. Three of the other tales revolve around Juliet, a bookish and stubborn woman who can't see outside of the persona that she has created for herself, until a chance encounter on a train, and later a child, put her in a position that she never would have dreamed possible. The last story, involving a playful woman with the ability to see the future, shows how this power affects the lives of those around her.

Munro's stories are about people you know, living out their lives in ho-hum towns, in some state of rural distress. Like most of her previous work, Runaway is uniquely small-town in attitude and decidedly Canadian in landscape. There are few big surprises, but what makes them special is Munro's ability to create a relationship between reader and character. Evoking both Edith Wharton and Flannery O' Connor, Runaway offers epiphanies and emotional undertones that are remarkably subtle, leaving the reader wondering if Munro is indeed writing fiction, or has somehow tapped into the depths of our own real lives. (JM)


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PHOTOGRAPHY
Miwa Yanagi
by Miwa Yanagi

Published: 2004
Pages: 78
Publisher: Hatje Cantz Publishers

Links:
Miwa Yanagi
Synopsis
Miwa Yanagi's photographs of elevator girls clustered in commercial spaces and young women's visions of themselves as grandmothers dramatically explore present and future views of Japanese society.

Review
Over the past ten years, Miwa Yanagi has made a significant mark on contemporary photography with two portfolios of work involving contemporary Japanese women. This foldout book, which was elegantly designed by the artist, illustrates the two series: Elevator Girls, made from 1993 to 1999, and My Grandmothers, a series begun in 1999 and still in progress. The first project depicts uniformed girls in architecturally modern, consumer settings. The subjects are modeled after ubiquitous elevator operators who dress in a similar cute style and represent the monotonous plight of most Japanese workers. White Casket, a four-part picture, shows a group of red-clad girls on the floor of an elevator morphing into a pool of blood while Midnight Awakening Dream, a 6-by-62 ft. print, captures an apocalyptic view of a shopping mall inhabited only by her haunting uniformed maidens.

The second series visualizes the thoughts of individual Japanese women about growing old — how they anticipate themselves 50 years hence. Yanagi solicited and interviewed subjects between 18 and 34 to find the most interesting dreams, then artificially aged the models using cosmetics, theatrical prosthetics, and computer manipulation. Yuka sees herself as a wild old gal riding sidecar with a young buck across America; Minami dreams of reigning over an island amusement park that rivals Disney; and Hiroko prepares her granddaughter to take over her thriving profession in the sex trade as a "Dominatrix of Legends." Told in a single frame and accompanied by the subject's statement, these works allow women with few social options a rare chance to dream something new. (PL)


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FEATURE

ChangeThis



 
Starting with the idea that existing media is lame and there's not enough good information out there to allow people to make more than knee-jerk decisions about big issues, Seth Godin (marketing author, writer, and entrepreuner) launched ChangeThis last summer — a blog devoted to important manifestos, all meant to inspire change. Although some are not as meaningful as others, it can be fun to troll through big-picture ideas from the likes of Malcolm Gladwell, Guy Kawasaki, and Al Gore. It may be harder than watching reruns on a flatscreen, but ultimately more rewarding. Assuming, of course, that you consider change to be an option. (MM)


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BOOK NEWS
A few notable bits of recent book news.

  • What to expect in books for the next six months (Guardian)

  • At group of reviewers at the Guardian pick some of their most anticipated titles, across a range of genres.

  • Welsh's influences are a bit of a surprise (Scotsman)

  • Topping the list for the author of Ecstasy, Porno, and Filth are Jane Austen, Sir Walter Scott, and George Eliot.

  • An extensive new reference on Sherlock Holmes is published (NY Times)

  • Called by many the definitive resource on the character created by Conan Doyle, this tome of Sherlockian reference by lawyer Leslie S. Klinger includes more than 2,000 footnotes.

  • Wolfe wins bad sex award (USA Today)

  • After hanging out in the freshman dorms to research I Am Charlotte Simmons, he wrote sex scenes that some find "ghastly... inept..[and] unrealistic."

  • The most checked-out books at libraries are mysteries (USA Today)

  • Exactly what we guessed.

  • Creator of the first modern graphic novel, Will Eisner dies at 87 (NY Times)

  • Eisner launched the Spirit in 1940, a innovative superhero comic that reached more than five million readers at its height.

  • Author and Activist Susan Sontag dies at 71 (BBC)

  • Winner of the National Book Award in 2000, author of 17 books, Sontag will also be remembered as an intellectual and passionate activist.

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    CREDITS

    Editors
    Mark Mangan
    Joe Mangan
    Paul Laster
    Jocelyn K. Glei
    Toby Warner

    Editors-at-Large
    Larry Weissman
    Sean McDonald

    Contributors
    Brian Blessinger
    Paul McLeary
    Hrag Vartanian
    Orlando Zepeda
    Christopher N. Hampton
    Somi Ghosh
    Chris Lamb
    Arlo Crawford
    Felicia Sullivan
    Tara Gallagher
    Andy Dehnart
    Peter Stepek

    Production & Design
    Anjuli Ayer
    William "Keats" Pierce
    Sascha Lewis

    Header Image
    "Elevator Girl House B4," (detail)
    by Miwa Yanagi
    Courtesy Deutsche Guggenheim, Berlin


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