The Man Who Japed

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Title The Man Who Japed

Cover of first edition (paperback)
Author Philip K. Dick
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Science fiction novel
Publisher Ace Books
Released 1956
Media type Print (Hardcover & Paperback)
Pages 160 pp
ISBN NA

The Man Who Japed is a science fiction novel written by Philip K. Dick, first published in 1956. Although one of Dick's lesser-known novels, it features several of the ideas and themes that recur throughout his later works.

The Man Who Japed was first published by Ace Books as one half of Ace Double D-193, bound dos-à-dos with The Space Born by E. C. Tubb.

Contents

[edit] Plot introduction

The Man Who Japed is set in the year 2114. A totalitarian government rules a post-apocalyptic world under the strict ideology of Morec, or Moral Reclamation. Morec has made the future society conservative and puritanical in nature, but also strict, oppressive and judgemental of its fellow citizens.

[edit] Themes & predictions

[edit] Future society

The book contains a number of ideas with regard to how society will have changed by the year 2114. The main character, Allen Purcell, lives in a single-room apartment that changes its appearance according to the time of day. Hence, at seven in the morning his "bedroom" changes into a kitchen; at night it will change back to a bedroom.

Other predictions of future society relate to the Morec system. Small robots called "juveniles" have been designed to seek out and record evidence of incriminating exchanges between people. Anyone who has committed what is deemed an "immoral act" - be it swearing or extramarital relationships - is brought before a committee where other citizens air their views on their behaviour.

[edit] Humour

The Man Who Japed is notable as being perhaps the first book in which Dick has used a sense of humour to great effect. This gives the book an irreverent tone in contrast to the dark themes prominent within the storyline. We learn, for instance, that the highly moral people of 2114 consider "damn" and "hell" to be bad swear words, and hereafter the writer censors them so that they become "d__m", and "h__l".

Humour is also a key theme in the book. Allen Purcell is found to have a sense of humour, thereby making him one of the rarest individuals in 2114's strict, humourless society. In discovering that he has such a gift, Purcell discovers that humour could help him in changing the face of society- for the better.

[edit] Politics

The Political system of The Man Who Japed could be interpreted as representing numerous real-life political parties. However, many agree that it is first and foremost a representation of the Communist Party of China.[citation needed]

[edit] Similarities with Nineteen Eighty-Four

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The Man Who Japed has much in common with George Orwell's 1949 book Nineteen Eighty-Four. For instance, Both novels are satirical takes on the dangers of politics; Both novels are set in a future dystopia; Both novels feature the state's invasions of citizens' privacy (1984's Telescreens and the Juveniles from The Man Who Japed.) Philip K. Dick once claimed that, to him, true science fiction deals with dystopias.[citation needed] He gave the example of 1984 as a book of this type, even though Orwell's book is rarely thought of as "Science Fiction". Overall, The Man Who Japed is different from 1984 in the way it presents ideas and features a more prominent sense of humour.

[edit] External links


Books by Philip K. Dick
Gather Yourselves Together | Voices From the Street | Vulcan's Hammer | Dr. Futurity | The Cosmic Puppets | Solar Lottery | Mary and the Giant | The World Jones Made | Eye in the Sky | The Man Who Japed | A Time for George Stavros | Pilgrim on the Hill | The Broken Bubble | Puttering About in a Small Land | Nicholas and the Higs | Time Out of Joint | In Milton Lumky Territory | Confessions of a Crap Artist | The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike | Humpty Dumpty in Oakland | The Man in the High Castle | We Can Build You | Martian Time-Slip | Dr. Bloodmoney, or How We Got Along After the Bomb | The Game-Players of Titan | The Simulacra | The Crack in Space | Now Wait for Last Year | Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? | Clans of the Alphane Moon | The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch | The Zap Gun | The Penultimate Truth | Deus Irae | The Unteleported Man | The Ganymede Takeover | Counter-Clock World | Nick and the Glimmung | Ubik | Galactic Pot-Healer | A Maze of Death | Our Friends from Frolix 8 | Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said | A Scanner Darkly | Radio Free Albemuth | VALIS | The Divine Invasion | The Transmigration of Timothy Archer
In other languages