GCU Grey Area
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Grey Area | |
---|---|
First appearance | Excession |
Last appearance | Excession |
Fate | Disappeared into the Excession |
Affiliation | The Culture (Ostracised) |
General Characteristics | |
Class | General Contact Unit (GCU) |
Armaments | Specifics unknown |
Defences | Shields, specifics unknown |
Propulsion | Warp drive |
In the Culture novels by Iain Banks, the GCU Grey Area is a General Contact Unit (a self-aware spaceship dedicated to the task of exploring the universe and interacting with other species) of the fictional Culture society that has turned eccentric. It is described in the novel Excession and has the dubious honour of being one of the few Culture ships to not to be listed in official records by its chosen name.
The Grey Area has a fascination with war, genocide and pain and the methods of inflicting it. Its interior is a museum containing devices that inflict pain and documents detailing their use. The ship has been described in reviews as "psychopathically righteous",[1] and as a good example of Banks' not letting technological terms and SF-staples stand in the way of describing interesting characters.[2]
The main reason Grey Area is despised by its peers is that it has chosen to ignore the Culture's taboo on non-consensual mindreading. It is for this reason that the ship is more commonly known among the other Culture Minds as Meatfucker.[2] In the novel Look to Windward it is explained that the denial of a Culture Mind's chosen name is viewed as a grave insult and mark of disapproval by its peers.
[edit] In Excession
During the events of Excession, the Grey Area pauses its historical research into a very comprehensive incident of genocide to help deliver Byr Genar-Hofoen to the GSV Sleeper Service. It travels within the Sleeper Service to the excession, and near the end of events appears to allow itself to crash into the energy grid near the excession and is presumed by the Culture to have been destroyed, though this is not the case, with the ship obviously having transcended some sort of boundary between universes or else having been assimilated into another consciousness.
[edit] References
- ^ Excession review (from a bookseller reviews page of the Waterstone’s bookstore chain, Orpington store. Accessed 2008-03-29.)
- ^ a b Iain Banks writes books about sex and drugs. Iain M Banks is a sci-fi nerd. Are they by any chance related? - The Guardian, Tuesday 20 May 1997