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| Gibson, William: Neuromancer (Study Guide)
Gibson, William: Neuromancer (Study Guide)
Study Guide for William Gibson: Neuromancer
(1984)
Chapter 1,
Chapter 2, Chapter 3,
Chapter 4, Chapter 5,
Chapter 6, Chapter 7,
Chapter 9, Chapter10,
Chapter 11Chapter 12
Chapter 13, Chapter 14, Chapter 15, Chapter 16, Chapter 17, Chapter 18, Chapter 19, Chapter 20, Chapter 21, Chapter 22, Chapter 23Coda
Introduction
When Neuromancer by
William Gibson
was first published it created a sensation. Orperhaps it would be more precise
to say that it was used to create a sensation,for
Bruce Sterling
and other Gibson associates declared that a new kind ofscience fiction had
appeared which rendered merely ordinary SF obsolete.Informed by the amoral urban
rage of the punk subculture and depicting thedeveloping human-machine interface
created by the widespread use of computersand computer networks, set in the near
future in decayed city landscapes likethose portrayed in the film
Blade Runner it claimed
to be the voice of a new generation. (Interestingly, Gibson himself has said he
had finished much of what was to be his body of early cyberpunk fiction before
ever seeing Blade Runner.) Eventually it wasseized on by hip "postmodern"
academics looking to ride the wave ofthe latest trend. Dubbed
"cyberpunk,";
the stuff was being talked abouteverywhere in SF. Of course by the time symposia
were being held on the subject,writers declared cyberpunk dead, yet the stuff
kept being published and itcontinues to be published today by writers like
K. W. Jeter
and
Rudy Rucker.Perhaps
the best and most representative anthology of cyberpunk writers is
Mirrorshades., edited by Sterling, the genre`s most outspokenadvocate.
Another page on Cyberpunk.
But cyberpunk`s status as the revolutionary vanguard was almost
immediatelychallenged. Its narrative techniques, many critics pointed out, were
positivelyreactionary compared to the experimentalism of mid-60s "new wave"
SF.One of the main sources of its vision was
William S. Burroughs` quasi-SF
novelslike
Nova Express,
(1964), and the voice of Gibson`s narratorsounded oddly like a slightly
updated version of old
Raymond Chandler
novelslike The Big Sleep, (1939). Others pointed out that almost all of
cyberpunk`s characteristics could be foundin the works of older writers such as
J. G. Ballard,
Philip K. Dick, Harlan Ellison,
or
Samuel R. Delany.
Most damning of all, it didn`t seem to havebeen claimed by the generation it
claimed to represent. Real punks did littlereading, and the vast majority of
young SF readers preferred to stick withtraditional storytellers such as
Larry Niven,
Anne McCaffrey and
even RobertHeinlein. Gibson`s
prose was too dense and tangled for casual readers, so itis not surprising that
he gained more of a following among academics than amongthe sort of people it
depicted. Heavy Metal comics and
MaxHeadroom brought more of
the cyberpunk vision to a young audience thandid the fiction.
(Art by Heavy Metal artist Moebius, with French text.)Yet
Neuromancer is historically significant. Most critics agreethat it was
not only the first cyberpunk novel, it was and remains the best.Gibson`s rich
stew of allusion to contemporary technology set a new standard forSF prose. If
his plots and characters are shallow and trite, that matteredlittle, for it is
not the tale but the manner of its telling that stands out.His terminology
continues to pop up here and there. Whereas an earliergeneration borrowed names
from its favorite author,
J. R. R. Tolkien,
like "Shadowfax" (a new-age
music group), "Gandalf" (a brand ofcomputer data switch), and
"Moria"; (an early
fantasy computer game),today there is a proliferation of references to
Neuromancer: "
Meat Puppets"
is a rock group, there is a computer virus called
" Screaming Fist,"
the Internet is commonly referredto as "Cyberspace" or--occasionally--"the
Matrix," and thereis at several World Wide Web sites are named
"Wintermute.";
Gibsonproduced his vision in a time when many people were becoming haunted by
the ideaof urban decay, crime rampant, corruption everywhere. Just as readers of
the 50slooked obsessively for signs that Orwell`s
Nineteen-Eighty-Four
was coming true, some readers keep an eye out for the emergence of
cyberpunk`snightmare world in contemporary reality. The fiction may not be
widely read, butthrough movies and comics it has created one of the defining
mythologies of ourtime.
The vision of Neuromancer was too confining for a writer ofGibson`s
originality, and after a couple of sequels--( Count Zero and Mona Lisa
Overdrive )--he turned to other experiments, such ashis "steampunk"
collaboration with Bruce Sterling: TheDifference Engine, depicting an
alternative Victorian Age in which huge,steam-driven computers were developed.
In 1995 he returned to Cyberpunk with another novel set in Japan,
Idoru.
Note that Gibson`s related story
Johnny Mnemonic
was made into a 1995 film.
Part One: Chiba City Blues
Chapter 1
In the eighties, the American image of Japan underwent a
profoundtransformation. For generations it had been on the margins of our
imagination:as the exotic land of cherry blossoms and geishas, later as the war
machinesending out kamikaze bomber pilots in World War II, and later still as
thesource of every sort of cheap, shoddy, imitative gadget. All of these
wereshallow images, of course. Japan industrialized not long after northern
Europe,and Western influences had been strong for centuries. But the success of
brandslike Sony and
Toyota
changed everything. Japan suddenly became perceived as thecutting edge of
modernity. Whereas the rest of the world had looked toward theU.S. for
innovation in the past, young Americans began to think of Japan as thefuture,
and it became a frequent setting for science fiction. Not that the newimage was
any more profound or less stereotyped, but it was certainly
different. Chiba City in this novel has
developed into a small section of the megapolis."The Zone" is the decayed inner
core of Chiba City. Today Japan hashalf the population of the U.S. crowded in
the area of California. Urban sprawlis a reality.
The opening image of the book, comparing nature to technology, sets the
tone ofthe narrative. "Case," the name of the protagonist, could
suggestdetective fiction, or it could suggest technology. His body--which he
treats asalmost an alien entity with which he is not friendly terms--is a kind
of casefor his mind and for the cyberspace with which it fuses, no more
significant initself than the case of a computer CPU. The persistent cyberpunk
obsession withthe mixture of flesh (called "meat" in the novel) and machinery
isintroduced through Ratz`s stainless steel teeth--unnatural looking
butcommonplace in Communist Eastern Europe. Why is it significant that Ratz
isugly? Ratz` reaction to the unexpected moment of silence is an old
cliché, but startlingly incongruous in this setting. Case`s addiction to
cyberspace iscertainly prophetic; someone half-jokingly set up a Usenet support
group for victims of cyberspace addiction:
( alt.usenet.recovery). A "coffin hotel"
is a buildingwhich rents out cheap sleeping space not much larger than a coffin.
How is acyberspace cowboy similar to a traditional cowboy? Different? Case is a
classicillegal hacker; but his present dilemma is caused by a classic
crime-novel situation, acrook attempting to skim the proceeds from organized
crime. Presumably theRussians developed the mycotoxin (fungal poison) as a
chemical warfare weapon.It has blocked his ability to experience cyberspace. Why
has he come to Japan?What evidence of pollution is contained in the paragraph
beginning "Now heslept"? "Arcologies" are huge, self-contained cities enclosed
ina single building, imagined by
Paolo Soleri. "Dex" is
dexedrine, apopular form of amphetimine. What characteristics make Case an
anti-hero? Whatdoes he do for a living? The possibility of an underground market
for body partshas been around since organ transplants became commonplace and has
often beentreated in SF.
Where had he first met Linda Lee? Repeated references to war in Europe
suggestit has been devastated in the recent past, probably by nuclear
weapons."Pachinko" is a very popular kind of Japanese gambling machine
vaguelylike vertically-oriented pinball. "French orbital fatigues" would bethe
uniform worn by French astronauts in orbit." "Yakitori" isJapanese barbecued
chicken, a common street snack. "Sarariman" is theJapanese word for a
businessman employed by a large corporation, formed on theEnglish words "salary"
and "man." Compare with Englishslang: "suit." What does it tell us that the
Japanese industrial
giant Mitsubishi seems to have
absorbed the U.S. genetic engineering firm Genentech?Although the computer
images in the novel have had more impact, the biologicalones are almost as
important. Why is the "sarariman" in danger inNight City? "Gaijin" is an
insulting Japanese term for Westerners.
The Yakuza is the
biggest Japanese organized crime syndicate, their Mafia. A VTR ispresumably a
"videotape recorder," a "simstim" deck is akind of virtual reality machine to
simulate stimuli, Manriki chains and shuriken(sharp-pointed steel stars) are
both familiar weapons from ninja movies. HongKong is famous for its tailors who
can cut and deliver a custom-made suit inhours. Can you guess why the wearing of
glasses would be an affectation ratherthan something normal in this society? The
pioneering Russian abstract
painter Wassily Kandinsky
specialized in shapeless blobs, lines, and smears in brightcolors.
More Kandinsky.
Salvador Dali frequently
depicted "melted" watches and clocks(for example,
" The Persistence of Memory,"
1931). Julius Deane usesexpressions ("boyo," "old son") which indicate a
Britishbackground. In the paragraph beginning"The cultivation of a certain
tameparanoia" he sees in a display window an elaborate alternative to a
pocketwatch. What is it? "Shin" is Japanese for "death." A taser stuns its
victims with an electrical shock, but isnot meant to be lethal. Even now it is
common for Japanese to wear surgicalmasks in public in an attempt to filter out
the pollution, and gasps of pureoxygen can be had from streetside vending
machines. What is Case trying to sellnow? Why can Ratz crush a shatterproof
plastic ashtray to shards in his hand?"Wig"="crazy;" after old hipster jazz,
"flipped hiswig," "wigged out." Flechettes" are darts ( flèche is
French for "arrow"). Molly is anextrapolation of the "tough dame" of
Chandler-style mean-streets crimefiction. Such femme fatale assassins are
a mainstay of modernfuturistic fiction. Do they represent women`s liberation?
What is hercharacteristic implant?
Chapter 2
A "fletcher" shoots "flechettes" (see above). In the operation
called"Screaming Fist" (a typical karate film title) a team had been hired
todestroy a Russian computer network ("nexus") in Kirensk with a virus,but
Armitage failed and was caught. What does "ICE" stand for? What is
an"icebreaker?" Note how computers have altered the economy. Molly tellsCase
that his surgery is being paid for in software.
Samurai
originated as thefaithful defenders of feudal lords during the Kamakura period,
but as Japan fellinto disorder, many of them roamed the country as "hired
swords" andas such are one of the most popular subjects for Japanese fiction,
drama, andfilm.
" Ninjas " are arelated
group who tend to have a worse reputation, though they could be just as
honorable assamurai."Working girl," is slang for prostitute, though when Molly
uses the term it is atfirst ambiguous, suggesting that she may be willing to
work as a street samuraifor anyone. Later we learn the horrifying truth. Note
the mechanical crab in thecourtyard. Endorphins are natural chemicals which
provide pleasurable feelingsand suppress pain. If Case has been injected with
"endorphininhibitors," clearly his tormentors have been trying to make him feel
asmuch pain as possible. Note that his surgery was carried out mostly
withoutincisions. To what is the sex Case experiences with Molly compared? Note
howMolly is presented as dominant, highly competent, and--most
important--betterinformed than Case. Such women are very common in contemporary
action fiction.Why do you think they are so popular with male readers? What is
her job?
What is Case trying to find out from Deane? Note how "Watergated" hasbecome
a verb, evidently meaning that the "Screaming Fist" conspiracyproliferated in
many directions. "Emp" stands for"EMP"="Electromagnetic Pulse" weapons. Nuclear
bombsdetonated at certain altitudes with certain characteristics can
destroyelectrical circuits, effectively destroying the enemy`s defenses.
Arpanet, the ancestor of the Internet was first constructed in an attempt to
work around this problem.Here "emps" would seem to be a lower-level weapon aimed
atpenetrations like "Screaming Fist." In a turkey shoot the birds arereleased to
be shot at, therefore a turkey shoot is a very easy form of killing. Screaming
Fist was a turkey shoot because the Soviet military had been informed in advance
that it was coming. "Ivan" is the Russian government. Zaibatsus are the giant
Japanesecorporations which traditionally employ their male workers for life.
What is theentertainment like at Sammi`s arena? Why was Linda Lee killed? Note
therecurring question: "Who is behind all this?" This questioncharacterizes this
sort of paranoid conspiratorial fiction.
Part Two: The Shopping Expedition
Chapter 3
The New-York to Washington D. C. corridor is often discussed as an
evolvingmegapolis. Here the process has gone much further, to develop into
"theSprawl." Note that the map described on the first page of this
chapterdepicts not population density, but the frequency of the exchange of
data: thenew definition of civilization. When a star "goes nova" it
explodes. Narita
is the Tokyo
airport, Schipol [or more correctly
Schiphol] is in
Amsterdam,
Orly is in
Paris. The silent train they rode on is
a maglev (magnetic
levitation) vehicle of the kind which has been tested invarious places. A
powerful electrical charge turns the rails into electromagnetswhich actually
lift the train above them a fraction of an inch, reducingfriction essentially to
zero and allowing for great speed at a low expenditureof energy. "The heat" is
old gangster slang for "the cops:"here, any form of law enforcement officer. How
has Armitage tried to guaranteethat Case will not betray his employers? Krill is
the tiny shrimp on whichbaleen whales live. The Japanese process it into various
fish and meatimitations. It has been proposed as a source of protein for an
over-populatedworld. New York is enclosed by a dome, but typically Gibson
introduces this factby observing its malfunctioning: a freak wind blowing a
piece of newspaper alongthe street.
The cerebral cortex is the most complex and vital part of the brain.
A"cortex bomb" would obviously be very ominous. The team is beingslowly
assembled. Finn has been mentioned earlier as the member of the"Screaming Fist"
team who escaped from the Russians in a stolenhelicopter. He is acting as the
technician for the current operation."Dixie Flatline`s construct" is an
electronic recording of the mind ofa dead "cowboy" (free-lance hacker
specializing in penetratingcomputer security systems) whose actual name was
McCoy Pauley. His nicknamesuggests death (alluding to a flat line on an
intensive-care room monitor) because heexperienced brain death three times. We
will learn more about the monstrousPeter Riviera later.
One of SF`s narrative difficulties is explaining future technology to the
readerin a setting in which such explanations should not be necessary. How does
Gibsonjustify providing his "info-dump" explaining the origin of the
matrix?"Dermatrodes" would be electrodes which attach to the epidermis, orskin.
A mandala is a complex Buddhist
symbol, often in circular form."Spiral arms" alludes the arms of distant
galaxies,
unreachable by anycurrent technology. Here they are a metaphor for unreachable
distant centers ofpower on Earth. The idea of a computer or network in which one
can experiencevirtual reality has been around in fiction for a long time, but
was firstpopularized in the movie
Tron (1982).
The stolen module the Finn has brought will enable Case to experience the
worldfrom inside Molly`s body without leaving cyberspace--telepathy
madetechnological.
Chapter 4
What distinguishes simstim addicts from cyberspace explorers like Case?
TallyIsham is a simstim star. What does Case experience about Molly`s effect on
otherpeople? Note the ironic use of the name "Memory Lane." The socketsimplanted
in people`s heads were to become a standard feature of
cyberpunk."Softs"=software; the word is an abbreviation for
Òmicrosoft,Ó an obvious allusion to the giant software
corporation. The Hosaka computer can function somewhat like thecomputer on the
Starship Enterprise:
query it vocally and it will tell you whatit knows. The answer is given in
multimedia form. Many Japanese women undergosurgery to remove the epicanthic
fold in the eyelid, giving them"Western" eyes. What does it mean that people are
now havingepicanthic folds surgically created? Dr. Rambali alludes to the fact
thatterrorists depend on the news media to publicize their causes, but the
mediaconcentrate so exclusively on their acts of terror that the message they
aretrying to convey is usually suppressed. How have the Panther
Modernsshort-circuited this process? "Panther" is short for the Black
Panthermovement of the sixties and early seventies which advocated violent
resistanceto racism. "Big Science" is a term for large, expensive
researchprojects such as the Human Genome Project or the
recently-cancelledSuperconducting Supercollider; but the name here probably
alludes to the titleof a
Laurie Anderson CD. Anderson`s fusion
of live theater and technology isvery suggestive of the kind of environment in
which Neuromancer is set.
Molly is trying to penetrate the Sense/Net headquarters inAtlanta to steal
the Dixie Flatline construct, assisted remotely by Caseinterfering with
Sense/Net`s security software, the two of them linked by thebroadcast network
created and run by the Panther Moderns. Case`s mind is usingMolly`s body. Why do
you think Gibson chose Atlanta as
media headquarters? A"blackbox" is any kind of illicit electronic device which
can bypassnormal circuits: the original permitted its users to make
long-distance phonecalls without paying for them. Strobe lights are known to
induce seizures incertain people when pulsed at precisely the right frequency.
How do the PantherModerns terrorize the people in the Sense/Net building?
Computer viruses arewritten mostly to do
simple kinds of mischief today; but in the novel virusesare tools which can
penetrate secure computers, retrieve information, and covertheir traces. Case`s
code name is "Cutter." Molly is "CatMother." "Brood" is the Panthers. How did
Molly break her leg?How does Case fool the security system into letting Molly
take theconstruct?
"Lupus" means "wolf" in Latin, although it`salso the name of a disfiguring
skin disease. Describe Lupus Yonderboy`sappearance. "Mr. Who" is an allusion to
the long-running British SF TVseries,
Dr. Who,
featuring an unnamed hero usually alluded to only as"Doctor" Note that
although this transaction is taking place inBAMA, the currency in new yen. The
"Doppler" effect makes sounds seemto rise in pitch as the sound source
approaches the hearer, fall as the recede.Note how Linda Lee continues to haunt
him. Here we are first given the name"Wintermute."
Chapter 5
Why is Molly able to dissect her crab "with alarming ease?" What is"jive"
and what is its function in this environment?
ArtificialIntelligence ("AI")
is a much-discussed concept which would involvethe creation of a complex
computer system which would replicate the functions ofa human brain. Debates
rage about whether such a construct would possessconsciousness, but research
goes on toward developing AI. Molly and Case areboth bent on learning who
Armitage is working for. The tip that Wintermute isinvolved leads them to its
parent corporation: Tessier-Ashpool S. A. "Thegravity well" is a concept
describing the difficulty of getting objects andpeople off the earth`s surface
into orbit, where
space colonies have
been built.Cyberpunk seldom depicts travel to other worlds, but takes high-orbit
spacecolonies for granted. An archipelago is usually a group of islands. What is
themeaning of the term here? "Spook" is slang for
" spy."Freeside is an orbiting space
colony shaped like a spindle (or cigar). Explainwhy it is "hard to keep track of
what generation, or combination ofgenerations" is running Tesssier-Ashpool at
any time? What does the slogan"Travel was a meat thing" mean? What does a
"joeboy" seem tobe?
Chapter 6
In this chapter we learn that "Armitage" is really Willis Corto, oneof the
agents who tried to carry out "Screaming Fist." What
does" Watergating" seem to mean in
this context? How was he used by themilitary? How is Armitage another variation
on the machine/human interfacetheme? How does the pattern of Armitage`s record
suggest that he, like Case, isjust a hireling and not an integral part of
whatever force is behind thismission?
Chapter 7
Why does the Mercedes talk to its passengers as it takes them into
Istanbul? What is the significance of
theexistence of letter-writers? How many different kinds of mutual distrust can
youfind in this chapter among the various characters? Riviera has had an
implantwhich allows him to project onto the retinas of his victims whatever
hechooses--far-fetched, but not so unscientific as mental telepathy. What
issignificant about the horse that they see? How does Riviera deceive Case
whileTerzibashjian captures him? A seraglio is a harem. According to Case and
Molly,who is probably responsible for rebuilding "Armitage" and sending himon
this mission?
Alan Turing, a
pioneer theoretician of machine intelligence,suggested that a computer might be
made indistinguishable from a human being.The "Turing heat" would therefore be
police assigned the task ofpreventing computers from reaching improper levels of
intelligence and power."Shopping politicals"=betraying dissidents. How do we
learn thatGermany was hit with at least one nuclear weapon during the war? What
does thelast line of this chapter signify?
Part Three: Midnight in the Rue Jules
Verne
Chapter 8
The scene now shifts from Istanbul to Paris. Freeside is called "an
orbitalGeneva" in relation to that city`s emphasis on offering secret
bankaccounts which are very attractive to those involved in illegal
transactions.What subliminal image does Riviera project to Case to symbolize his
opinion ofMolly? Since they are taking a Japan Air Lines shuttle from Paris to
the orbitalstation called "Freeside" it is natural that koto music is playing
thebackground. Rastafarianism is a movement that originated in the 1930s
inJamaica, which involves the hairstyle called "dreadlocks," the hopefor blacks
to return to Ethiopia (identified with the Biblical Zion),
reggaemusic, and the smoking of
ganja (marijuana). It was inspired in part by themovement founded by
Marcus Garvey, who
tried to purchase a fleet of ships (the"Black Star Line") to transport blacks
back to Africa during the early1920s. They refer to White civilization, and the
U. S. in particular as"Babylon," the demonic city of Christian apocalyptic
writing. God iscalled "Jah," short for "Jahweh," which scholars think wasthe
original pronunciation of the Hebrew name for God (though in the scholarshipthe
"J" is pronounced as in German, as a "Y" sound). Therasta dialect is used by the
characters in this chapter. Without rotation, anorbiting space station is in
free-fall, and this creates an apparentlyweightless environment familiar from
televised orbital missions. However, ifsuch a station is spun around a central
axis, centrifugal force pusheseverything toward the rim. The closer to the rim
one is, the stronger theapparent gravity is; whereas at the center of rotation,
freefall weightlessnessprevails. Note the various visual games Riviera continues
to play. What revealsthat Dixie Flatline is in fact bothered by knowing that he
is dead? "Rue[Street]
Jules Verne"
is of course a tribute to the French grandfather ofscience fiction. Names
spelled "Aerol" and "Maelcum" areapproximations of the rasta pronunciations of
"Errol" and"Malcolm." Dub is a form of Jamaican rap music, popular throughout
theCaribbean. Who has persuaded the rastas to cooperate with the team, and
how?
Chapter 9
A "g-web" would be a retaining net able to absorb the impact ofacceleration
and deceleration as the tug maneuvers. Such impact is measured in"g`s" or Earth
gravity equivalents. To experience 2 gs, for instance,is to be feel a force
equal to two times Earth`s gravity. Rastas avoid saying"we," using "I and I"
instead. A "frog" companywould be French. Gibson has no hesitation about using
rather dated slang in hisnarrative mixed with futuristic locutions. When Case`s
attempt to penetrateWintermute is repelled, where and when does his mind seem to
take him? Where ishe really? What does Wintermute reveal to Case about its true
nature?
Chapter 10
The description of the plants tumbling over the balconies of Freeside
stronglysuggests traditional images of the Hanging Garden of Babylon. The blue
skyoverhead is artificial, a recording made in the French sea resort of
Cannes.
Whydoes the pseudo-death of Deane haunt Case so much? How does Case react to
treesand grass? What bizarre style does he encounter worn by three Japanese
wives?Why is Case so puzzled about being sent the Kuang Grade Mark Eleven
icebreakervirus? What is Dixie Flatline`s theory?
Chapter 11
"Vigntième Siecle" is French for "TwentiethCentury," now a "period."
Here we first encounter Lady 3JaneMarie-France Tessier-Ashpool. Why does Peter
Riviera`s show upset Case so much?Of the expensive shops, Gucci is Italian,
Tsuyako is Japanese, Hermès isFrench, and Liberty is English. What does
Case learn about Linda from Wintermutein this chapter? Wintermute seems to be
behaving like an old-fashioned melodramavillain: manipulating the protagonist by
endangering the woman he cares about.The girl in Case`s cubicle is a "meat
puppet," a prostitute who hashad her conscious mind artificially disconnected
from her body by a "neuralcutout" so that she can carry out her duties on
"automaticpilot." Why was Molly so furious at Riviera`s sadistic fantasy
performance?"Snuff" refers to film or performances involving the killing of
womenfor the sexual pleasure of sadists. Snuff films have a long-standing status
asan urban legend--nobody has ever found an authentic commercial example--but
theyare commonly cited as the quintessence of pornography. So Molly`s boss
wasplanning to have her killed. Why did she kill the Senator? This story
makesclear what Molly has to gain by remaining an outlaw. What is Molly`s
theoryabout how Wintermute is manipulating her?
Chapter 12
Why has Gibson invented the term "nighted"? "Le Monde" isFrench for "The
World." "Old money" means wealth combinedwith social status in old families such
as the Rockefellers. "Oldcredit" would be mean the same in a culture where
physical money no longerhas a function. Remember that Case is using the name
"Lupus"
now. Origami
(traditional Japanese paper-folding) cranes have come to be symbols ofpeace
because of their association with the anti-nuclear bomb campaigns inJapan. What
do you think is the significance of Cathy`s crane? Examine themetaphors in the
paragraph describe the Case`s sensations when the drug hits;can you see any
pattern in them? What do they have in common? Why is the zodiacon Freeside
referred to as a "loser`s" zodiac? Cath had hoped toseduce Case with this drug.
What goes wrong with her plan? What is Case`sattitude toward his anger the next
morning? "Turing"="Turingpolice," defined above.
Part Four: The Straylight Run
Chapter 13
Case learns for the first time what his real mission is, from the police.
Whatis it? "Good cop/bad cop" is a familiar routine in which oneinterrogator is
angry and threatening while the other feigns sympathy. Thesuspect is meant to
shrink from the first into the "protective" armsof the other and reveal his or
her guilt. The "Recording Angel" is amythical being who records all deeds good
and bad to decide who makes it intoheaven. Case`s surgical implant procedure,
evidently designed by Wintermute, wasso innovative it enabled the illegal clinic
in Chiba City to capitalize on theknowledge involved to get rich. How has this
fact led to Case`s arrest? Why doesMichèle say that Case has no "care"
for his species? Why willit be difficult for Sense/Net to protest the
destruction of the Dixie Flatlineconstruct? Since both the pilot of the biplane
and the gardening robot havestruck, to whom is Case speaking in the last lines
of this chapter?
Chapter 14
When Case loads the Chinese icebreaker software, Dixie Flatline observes
fromoutside it that it appears invisible--reassuring for the team.
Dixie`sdescription of the way the virus works is a well-written example of
SFpseudo-science talk: a set of metaphors that make a kind of sense without
anyreal technical explanation. When Case finds himself facing what appears to be
the Finn back in Metro Holografix, who is he really talking to? For the
reference to the burning bush, see Exodus 3:2-6. An old philosophical puzzle
asks, "If a tree falls in the forest where there`s no one to hear it, does it
make a sound?" How is Wintermute able to recreate people and places Case knows?
In what sense is the imaginary vacuum tube part of Wintermute`s DNA? What threat
does Wintermute claim to want to protect humanity from? A "folly" is the sort of
fantastic architectural construction built in late 18th-century England to
suggest medieval or classical ruins. The explanation given by the jeweled head
of the Villa Starlight is another example of an "info-dump." What is the source
of this one? "Semiotics" here refers to the meaning of the patterns of the
Villa. Why does Wintermute need the team to penetrate past the head?
Wintermute`s last speech is highly ambiguous. Can you puzzle a meaning out of
it? In Exodus Chapter 3, God speaks to Moses from within a burning
bush.
Chapter 15
The meeting with Wintermute this time "killed" Case temporarily. Whenhe
reestablishes simstim contact with Molly, Wintermute informs her of
theconnection on her implanted ocular display which normally acts as a digital
clock. This trick is what she reacts to when she says "Cute." The wordsin ALL
CAPS in the rest of this chapter are similar displays. Molly uses hertongue to
flip a control in her mouth that switches her vision from perceivingnormal light
to some kind of substitute which works in the dark. What is a
" stash"
as Molly defines it? Molly`s story about Johnny reveals thatshe and Case have
something important in common. What is it? Why do you thinkthe ordinarily very
private Molly is telling him this story? "Fancydress" is British for costumes of
the sort one would wear to a costumeparty. Note how compact discs, invented
shortly before this novel was written,are treated here as antique technology.
The combination of hypodermic and spoonindicates heroin use. The heroin is
melted over heat in the spoon, then injectedvia the hypodermic needle. What is
the symbolism involved in the rerouting ofMolly`s tearducts? The Egyptian
Pharaohs had their servants killed and buriedwith them. Ashpool has been in a
sort of suspended animation for the last thirtyyears, forever on the brink of
death but never dying, an idea that was earlierexplored in Philip K. Dick`s
brilliant novel Ubik. What doesCase see in the face of the dead 3Jane?
(It turns out later that this is not thereal 3Jane, by the way.) What is
suggested by the fact that a fiberoptic cableis connected to her neck? The theme
of a rich, self-indulgent family, falleninto decadent madness, is a
cliché of popular fiction, and can be foundin Gibson`s model, Raymond
Chandler.
Chapter 16
What does Molly like about her relationship with Case? His computer
completesthe search Case had directed it to make for the name "General
Girling"and the result is displayed by Dixie Flatline on Molly`s optic implant
sinceCase is jacked into her brain at present. Since the display is not very
wide,only a few letters can be shown at a time. The crazed Armitage is trying
toorder the Rastas around, but they refuse because this is a "Babylonwar"--a
struggle involving outsiders, not really their concern. "Rudeboy" is rasta slang
for a tough gang member. Maelcom boasts that he istough enough to defy the
Zionite leaders and stay with
Case." Rocksteady"
is one variety of Jamaican pop music, a predecessor toreggae. We learn why
Riviera was important, to seduce 3Jane into giving up someof the secrets of how
to penetrate Straylight to Armitage/Corto. When the latternext shows up, he has
flipped back into the past, into the ill-fated"Screaming Fist" run. Why is Case
so upset about Armitage fallingapart? The maddened Armitage/Corto has not only
killed a man in order to destroyone of the computers being used on the run, but
he has set the escape pod thathe is in to separate from the ship without closing
its seals; he imagines he isescaping Russia for Finland, but in fact he is
hurled into the vacuum of space.
Chapter 17
What makes the Tessier-Ashpool corporation more vulnerable than the
zaibatsus? Who is ultimately behind the deaths of Armitage andAshpool?
What motivates Dixie Flatline to work for Wintermute? The way the booksin the
Straylight library are described suggests that books are antiquerarities. The
Dada artist Marcel Duchamp created a large sculpture out of glassand paint
depicting some chocolate-grinding machinery and molds and gave it
thecharacteristically surrealistic title "La mariée mis ànu par
ses célibataires, même" -- The BrideStripped Bare by Her
Bachelors, Even. The object was badly cracked whenit was being moved early
in its history, and the lines of the shards have becomea familiar part of the
work of art. Knowing how Molly hates Riviera, her messageto him to be delivered
by Case is ominous. Why would spacial disorientation holda peculiar horror for
cowboys?
Chapter 18
Run Run Shaw owned one of the busiest film studios in the world in
Hong Kong,churning out hundreds
of martial arts films for distribution throughout
Asia. Bruce Lee and
Clint Eastwood are pioneering
"bad-ass heroes" of actionmovies East and West, respectively. Riviera encases
Molly`s hands in a variationof old paper "Chinese handcuffs": the more you
struggle, the tighteryou`re trapped. As in classic hardboiled detective fiction
(like TheMaltese Falcon) , the lines of alliance are constantly shifting,
and younever know whom you can trust. Cray
manufactures the world`s most popularsupercomputers. Using their brand name for
a little commonplace monitor raisesthe ante on the technology. Molly reveals
that she had her own agenda when shekilled Hideo and tried to kill Riviera. Why
has Riviera decided to ally himselfwith 3Jane against the team?
Chairman Mao Tse Tung`s most famous
saying was"Power comes out of the barrel of a gun." How did Riviera preventMolly
from really killing the two men at the pool?
Chapter 19
With Molly crippled, Case and Maelcum have to penetrate Villa
Straylightthemselves to complete the mission, and to rescue her. How do the
life-supportsystems of the Villa Straylight symbolize the role of the
corporation itself?What does "decanted" usually mean? (Look it up.) What does it
meanwhen 3Jane says "I was decanted?" Why does she use the present tensewhen she
says "He strangles her in bed?" 3Jane`s mother`s idea ofblending the family with
artificial intelligences to achieve a sort ofimmortality is an old SF theme.
3Jane reveals an important fact about the AIs,which holds the key to the novel:
Wintermute is only one of two AIs. When Mollyabruptly sees her mutilated face,
it is of course Peter taunting her again.
Chapter 20
When Case next jacks in, he is sent back to the beach at Chiba city, to
hismemories of Linda Lee. Japanese Zen gardens consist of a few well-placed
rocksand sand raked in elaborate patterns. Case discovers that the AI
manipulatinghim at the moment is not Wintermute; it is the other one. What is
the point ofCase`s complaint about the food? The tan Case has acquired on
Freeside is anexpensive luxury. What is Linda`s reaction to it? When Case feels
himself drawndown to the "meat" level by the projection of Linda Lee, he
definesthe latter in terms of information: spiral DNA molecules and
pheromones,molecules which convey messages through smell. His seduction from the
world ofthe Net down into the flesh is highly ironic, of course.
Why?
Chapter 21
"Event horizon" refers to the border of a black hole and is used hereto
refer to the limit of the illusion the AI has constructed. It was widelybelieved
in ancient times that you could only summon up and control a spiritwhose secret
name you had learned. There is a famous scene in Goethe`s
Faust in which the
protagonist tries and fails to identify thedemon Mephistopheles. The name
"Neuromancer" is a variation on"necromancer," a magician dealing in evil spirits
and death("neuro"=nerves, artificial intelligence,"mancer"=magician). "Romancer"
is yet another pun.
Chapter 22
The Coriolis force, which causes movement to deviate slightly from a
straightline on rotating bodies (like the Earth) is exaggerated in the rapidly
spinningspindle. Case thinks 3Jane may spare Molly because he has experienced
thelatter`s attraction to her through the simstim rig. A ROM construct would
befixed, whereas RAM is indefinitely expandable. The almost superhuman ninja
Hideocatches a fletcher arrow in flight and flips it back at Riviera. Why
doesRiviera`s blinding of Hideo fail to defeat him? How has Molly gotten her
revengeon Riviera? In an electronic world, old-fashioned mechanical locks
areunexpected obstacles.
Chapter 23
In what ways is Neuromancer different from Wintermute? How are the
dwarfs`quarters in the palace of the Duke of Mantua like the Villa Straylight
for theTessier-Ashpools? Case needs to energize himself with hate to succeed
inbreaking through the final barriers. Whom does he hate? Again the
Jamaican"dub" music welcomes him back to Freelight.
Coda
Why does Molly leave Case? The shuriken, so prominent throughout the novel,
wasnever used. What does Case think it symbolizes? Why did Wintermute want to
fusewith Neuromancer? What does this metaphor represent: "a series of warmblinks
strung along a chain of winter"?
Alpha Centauri
is the nearest starto Earth. So what does it mean that Wintermute/Neuromancer
has found recordedevidence of another AI there? Michael or Mikal is not a really
rare name for awoman; so it`s difficult to know if we are supposed to read
anything into thename. He, Riviera and Linda will exist forever in the AI`s
mind. Why do youthink male authors so frequently imagine highly desirable but
dangerous womenlike Molly who get devastatingly involved with their protagonists
and thenleave?
Notes by Paul Brians, Department of
English,Washington State University, Pullman 99164-5020.
Version of May 1, 1997.
Thanks to Timothy Larreau for suggesting links.
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