William Gibson
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
William Gibson | |
---|---|
William Gibson in August 2007 |
|
Born | March 17, 1948 Conway, South Carolina |
Occupation | Novelist |
Writing period | 1977– |
Genres | Science fiction |
Literary movement | Cyberpunk |
Notable work(s) | Neuromancer (novel, 1984) |
Notable award(s) | Nebula, Hugo, Philip K. Dick, Ditmar, Seiun, Prix Aurora |
Influences
|
|
Influenced
|
|
William Ford Gibson (born 17 March 1948) is an American-Canadian[16] writer who has been called the "noir prophet" of the cyberpunk subgenre of science fiction.[17] In 1982, Gibson coined the term "cyberspace" and popularized the concept in his debut novel, Neuromancer (1984). Gibson is best known for depicting a visualised, worldwide communications network before it became ubiquitous in the 1990s, and he is credited with anticipating and establishing the conceptual foundations of the Internet and the World Wide Web in particular.
Having moved around frequently with his family as a child, Gibson grew to be a shy, ungainly teenager who took refuge in reading science fiction. After spending his adolescence at a private boarding school in Arizona, Gibson dodged the draft at the onset of the Vietnam War by emigrating to Canada in 1967, where he became immersed in counterculture and after settling in Vancouver eventually became a full-time writer; he retains dual citizenship.[18] Gibson's early works are bleak, noir near-future stories about the effect of cybernetics and computer networks on humans – "lowlife meets high tech". The short stories were published in leading science fiction magazines and eventually effectively renovated the science fiction genre, which at the time was considered widely insignificant. The themes, settings and characters developed in these stories culminated in his first novel, Neuromancer, which garnered unprecedented critical and considerable commercial success, virtually launching the cyberpunk literary movement.
Although much of Gibson's reputation has remained rooted in Neuromancer, his work has continued to evolve in style and concept. After expanding on Neuromancer with two more novels to complete the dystopic Sprawl trilogy, Gibson became a central figure to an entirely different science fiction sub-genre – steampunk – with the 1990 alternate history novel The Difference Engine, written in collaboration with Bruce Sterling. In the 1990s he composed the Bridge trilogy of novels, which focused on sociological observations of near future urban environments and late-stage capitalism. His most recent novels – Pattern Recognition (2003) and Spook Country (2007) – are set in a contemporary world and have put Gibson's work onto mainstream bestseller lists for the first time.
Gibson is one of the most highly acclaimed North American science fiction writers,[19] feted by The Guardian in 1999 as "probably the most important novelist of the past two decades". To date, Gibson has written more than twenty short stories, nine critically acclaimed novels (one in collaboration), a nonfiction artist's book, and has contributed articles to several major publications and collaborated extensively with performance artists, filmmakers and musicians. His thought has been cited as an influence on science fiction authors, academia, cyberculture, and technology.
Contents |
[edit] Early life
[edit] Childhood, itinerance and adolescence
William Ford Gibson was born in 1948 in the coastal city of Conway, South Carolina and spent most of his childhood in Wytheville, Virginia, a small town in the Appalachians where his parents had been born and raised.[20][21] His family moved frequently during Gibson's youth due to his father's position as manager of a large construction company.[19] While Gibson was still a young child,[VI] his father choked to death in a restaurant while on a business trip.[20] His mother, unable to tell William the bad news, had someone else inform him of the death.[22]
Loss is not without its curious advantages for the artist. Major traumatic breaks are pretty common in the biographies of artists I respect.
—William Gibson, interview with The New York Times Magazine, August 19, 2007.[22]
A few days after the death, Gibson's mother returned them from their home in Norfolk, Virginia to Wytheville.[21][23] Gibson later described Wytheville as "a place where modernity had arrived to some extent but was deeply distrusted" and credits the beginnings of his relationship with science fiction, his "native literary culture",[23] with the subsequent feeling of abrupt exile.[20] At thirteen, unbeknownst to his mother, he purchased an anthology of Beat writing, thereby gaining exposure to the writings of Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac, and William S. Burroughs; Burroughs had a particularly pronounced effect, greatly altering Gibson's notions of the possibilities of science fiction literature.[3][8]
A shy, ungainly teenager, Gibson consciously rejected religion[23] and took refuge in reading science fiction and edgier, renegade writers such as Burroughs and Henry Miller.[18] At fifteen, he was sent to a private boarding school in Tucson, Arizona by his then "chronically anxious and depressive" mother,[20] who had remained in Wytheville since the death of her husband and who died when Gibson was nineteen.[23][21] Tom Maddox has commented that Gibson "grew up in an America as disturbing and surreal as anything J.G. Ballard ever dreamed".[24]
[edit] Draft-dodging, exile and counterculture
After his mother's death, Gibson left school without graduating and became very isolated for a long time, traveling to California and Europe and immersing himself in counterculture.[23][21][18] In 1967, he elected to move to Canada in order "to avoid the Vietnam war draft".[20][23] At his draft hearing, he honestly informed interviewers that his intention in life was to sample every mind-altering substance in existence.[26] Gibson has observed that he "did literally evade the draft, as they never bothered drafting me";[20] after the hearing he went home and purchased a bus ticket to Toronto, and left a week or two later.[23] In the biographical documentary No Maps for These Territories (2000) Gibson said that his decision was motivated less by conscientious objection than by a desire to "sleep with hippie chicks" and indulge in hashish.[23]He elaborated on the topic in a 2008 interview:
When I was started out as a writer I took credit for draft evasion where I shouldn't have. I washed up in Canada with some vague idea of evading the draft but then I was never drafted so I never had to make the call. I don't know what I would have done if I'd really been drafted. I wasn't a tightly wrapped package at that time. if somebody had drafted me I might have wept and gone. I wouldn't have liked it of course.
In Toronto he found the émigré community of American draft dodgers unbearable due to the prevalence of clinical depression, suicide and hardcore substance abuse.[23] He appeared, during the Summer of Love of 1967, in a CBC newsreel item about hippie subculture in Yorkville, Toronto,[28] for which he was paid $500 – the equivalent of 20 weeks rent – which financed his later travels.[29] Aside from a "brief, riot-torn spell" in the District of Columbia, Gibson spent the rest of the 1960s in Toronto, where he met a Vancouver girl with whom he subsequently traveled to Europe.[20] Gibson has recounted that they concentrated their travels on European nations with fascist regimes and favourable exchange rates, including spending time on a Greek archipelago and in Istanbul in 1970,[30] as they "couldn't afford to stay anywhere that had anything remotely like hard currency".[31]
The couple married and settled in Vancouver, British Columbia in 1972, with Gibson looking after their first child while they lived off his wife's teaching salary. During the 1970s Gibson made a substantial part of his living from scouring Salvation Army thrift stores for underpriced artifacts he would then up-market to specialist dealers.[30] Realizing that it was easier to sustain high college grades, and thus qualify for generous student financial aid, than to work,[8] he enrolled at the University of British Columbia (UBC), earning "a desultory bachelor's degree in English"[20] in 1977.[32] Through studying English literature, he was exposed to a wider range of fiction than he would have read otherwise; something he credits with giving him ideas inaccessible from within the culture of science fiction, including an awareness of postmodernity.[10] It was at UBC that he attended his first course on science fiction, at the end of which he was encouraged to write his first short story, "Fragments of a Hologram Rose".[19]
[edit] Post-graduation, early writing and the evolution of cyberpunk
After considering pursuing a master's degree on the topic of hard science fiction novels as fascist literature,[8] Gibson discontinued writing in the year that followed graduation and, as one critic put it, expanded his collection of punk records.[33] During this period he worked at various jobs, including a three-year stint as teaching assistant on a film history course at his alma mater.[19] Impatient at much of what he saw at a science fiction convention in Vancouver in 1980 or 1981, Gibson found in fellow panelist, punk musician and author John Shirley, a kindred spirit.[34] The two became immediate and lifelong friends, and it was Shirley who persuaded Gibson to sell his early short stories and to take writing seriously.[33][34]
In 1977, facing first-time parenthood and an absolute lack of enthusiasm for anything like "career," I found myself dusting off my twelve-year-old's interest in science fiction. Simultaneously, weird noises were being heard from New York and London. I took Punk to be the detonation of some slow-fused projectile buried deep in society's flank a decade earlier, and I took it to be, somehow, a sign. And I began, then, to write.
—William Gibson, "Since 1948".[20]
Through Shirley, Gibson came into contact with science fiction authors Bruce Sterling and Lewis Shiner; reading Gibson's work, they realised that it was, as Sterling put it, "breakthrough material" and that they needed to "put down our preconceptions and pick up on this guy from Vancouver; this [was] the way forward."[35][23] Gibson met Sterling at a science fiction convention in Denver, Colorado in the autumn of 1981, where he read "Burning Chrome" – the first cyberspace short story – to an audience of four people, and later stated that Sterling "completely got it".[23]
In October 1982 Gibson traveled to Austin, Texas for ArmadilloCon, at which he appeared with Shirley, Sterling and Shiner on a panel called "Behind the Mirrorshades: A Look at Punk SF", where Shiner noted "the sense of a movement solidified".[35] After a weekend discussing rock'n'roll, MTV, Japan, fashion, drugs and politics, Gibson left the cadre for Vancouver, declaring half-jokingly that "a new axis has been formed."[35] Sterling, Shiner, Shirley and Gibson, along with Rudolf Rucker, went on to form the core of the radical cyberpunk literary movement.[36]
[edit] Literary career
[edit] Early short fiction
-
For more details on this topic, see Burning Chrome.
Gibson's early writings are generally near-future stories about the influences of cybernetics and cyberspace (computer-simulated reality) technology on the human race. His themes of hi-tech shanty towns, recorded or broadcast stimulus (later to be developed into the "sim-stim" package featured so heavily in Neuromancer), and dystopic intermingling of technology and humanity, are already evident in his first published short story, "Fragments of a Hologram Rose" (1977).[8] The latter thematic obsession was described by his friend and fellow author, Bruce Sterling, in the introduction of Gibson's short story collection Burning Chrome, as "Gibson's classic one-two combination of lowlife and high tech."[37]
In the early 1980s, Gibson's stories appeared in Omni and Universe 11, wherein his fiction developed a film noir, bleak feel. He consciously distanced himself as far as possible from the mainstream of science fiction (towards which he felt "an aesthetic revulsion", expressed in "The Gernsback Continuum"), to the extent that his highest goal was to become "a minor cult figure, a sort of lesser Ballard."[8] When Bruce Sterling started to distribute the stories, he found that "people were just genuinely baffled... I mean they literally could not parse the guy's paragraphs... the imaginative tropes he was inventing were just beyond peoples' grasp."[23]
While Larry McCaffery has commented that these early short stories displayed flashes of Gibson's ability, science fiction critic Darko Suvin has identified them as "undoubtedly [cyberpunk's] best works", constituting the "furthest horizon" of the genre.[34] The themes which Gibson developed in the stories, the Sprawl setting of "Burning Chrome" and the character of Molly Millions from "Johnny Mnemonic" ultimately culminated in his first novel, Neuromancer.[34]
[edit] Neuromancer
The sky above the port was the color of television, tuned to a dead channel.
—opening sentence of Neuromancer (1984)
Neuromancer was commissioned by Terry Carr for the third series of Ace Science Fiction Specials, which was intended to exclusively feature debut novels. Given a year to complete the work,[38] Gibson undertook the actual writing out of "blind animal terror" at the obligation to write an entire novel – a feat which he felt he was "four or five years away from."[8] After witnessing the first twenty minutes of landmark cyberpunk film Blade Runner (1982) which was released when Gibson had written a third of the novel, he "figured [Neuromancer] was sunk, done for. Everyone would assume I’d copped my visual texture from this astonishingly fine-looking film."[39] He re-wrote the first two-thirds of the book twelve times, feared losing the reader's attention and was convinced that he would be "permanently shamed" following its publication; yet what resulted was a major imaginative leap forward for a first-time novelist.[8]
Neuromancer's release was not greeted with fanfare, but it hit a cultural nerve,[40] quickly becoming an underground word-of-mouth hit.[34] It became the first novel to win the "triple crown"[8] of science fiction awards (the Nebula, the Hugo, and Philip K. Dick Award for paperback original) and sold more than 6.5 million copies worldwide.[41]
Lawrence Person in his "Notes Toward a Postcyberpunk Manifesto" (1998) identified Neuromancer as "the archetypal cyberpunk work",[42] and in 2005, Time magazine included it in their list of the 100 best English-language novels written since 1923, opining that "[t]here is no way to overstate how radical [Neuromancer] was when it first appeared."[43] According to literary critic Larry McCaffery, the auspiciousness of the novel was in its originality of vision, exhilarating prose, and technological similes and metaphors. He described the concept of the matrix as a place where "data dance with human consciousness... human memory is literalized and mechanized... multi-national information systems mutate and breed into startling new structures whose beauty and complexity are unimaginable, mystical, and above all nonhuman."[8] Gibson later commented on himself as an author circa Neuromancer that "I'd buy him a drink, but I don't know if I'd loan him any money," and referred to the novel as "an adolescent's book".[23] The success of Neuromancer was to effect the 34-year old Gibson's emergence from obscurity.[44]
[edit] The Sprawl trilogy, The Difference Engine and the Bridge trilogy
Although much of Gibson's reputation has remained rooted in Neuromancer, his work continued to evolve conceptually and stylistically.[45] Despite adding the final sentence of Neuromancer “He never saw Molly again” at the last minute in a deliberate attempt to prevent himself from ever writing a sequel, he did precisely that with Count Zero (1986), a slower-paced character-focused work set in the Sprawl alluded to in its predecessor.[46] He next intended to write an unrelated postmodern space opera, titled The Log of the Mustang Sally, but reneged on the contract with Arbor House after a falling out over the dustjacket art of their hardcover of Count Zero.[47] Abandoning The Log of the Mustang Sally, Gibson instead wrote Mona Lisa Overdrive (1988), a stylistically virtuosic novel which in the words of Larry McCaffery "turned off the lights" on cyberpunk literature.[8][34] It was a culmination of his previous two novels, set in the same universe with shared characters, thereby completing the Sprawl trilogy. The trilogy solidified Gibson's reputation,[48] with both later novels also earning Nebula and Hugo Award nominations.
The Sprawl trilogy was followed by the 1990 novel The Difference Engine, an alternate history novel Gibson wrote in collaboration with Bruce Sterling. Set in a technologically advanced Victorian era Britain, the novel was a departure from the authors' cyberpunk roots. It was nominated for the Nebula Award for Best Novel in 1991 and the John W. Campbell Memorial Award in 1992, and is often cited as a central novel of the steampunk genre.[49]
Gibson's second series, "the Bridge trilogy", is composed of Virtual Light (1993), a "darkly comic urban detective story",[50] Idoru (1996), and All Tomorrow's Parties (1999). It centers on San Francisco in the near future and evinces Gibson's recurring themes of technological, physical, and spiritual transcendence in a more grounded, matter-of-fact style than his first trilogy.[51] The Salon.com's Andrew Leonard notes that in the Bridge trilogy, Gibson's villains change from multinational corporations and artificial intelligences of the Sprawl trilogy to the mass media – namely tabloid television and the cult of celebrity,[52] Virtual Light depicts an "end-stage capitalism, in which private enterprise and the profit motive are taken to their logical conclusion".[53] Leonard's review called Idoru a "return to form" for Gibson,[54] while critic Steven Poole asserted that All Tomorrow's Parties marked his development from "science-fiction hotshot to wry sociologist of the near future."[55]
[edit] Later 21st-century incarnation
…I felt that I was trying to describe an unthinkable present and I actually feel that science fiction's best use today is the exploration of contemporary reality rather than any attempt to predict where we are going…The best thing you can do with science today is use it to explore the present. Earth is the alien planet now.
After All Tomorrow's Parties, Gibson began to adopt a more realist style of writing, with continuous narratives – "speculative fiction of the very recent past."[56] Science fiction critic John Clute has interpreted this approach as Gibson's recognition that traditional science fiction is no longer possible "in a world lacking coherent 'nows' to continue from", characterizing it as "SF for the new century".[57] Gibson's novels Pattern Recognition (2003) and Spook Country (2007) were both set in the same contemporary universe – "more or less the same one we live in now"[58] – and put Gibson's work onto mainstream bestseller lists for the first time.[59] As well as the setting, the novels share some of the same characters, including Hubertus Bigend and Pamela Mainwaring – employees of the enigmatic marketing company Blue Ant.
A phenomenon peculiar to this era was the independent development of annotating fansites, PR-Otaku and Node Magazine, devoted to Pattern Recognition and Spook Country respectively.[4] These websites tracked the references and story elements in the novels through online resources such as Google and Wikipedia and collated the results, essentially creating hypertext versions of the books.[60] Critic John Sutherland characterised this phenomenon as threatening "to completely overhaul the way literary criticism is conducted".[61]
After the September 11, 2001 attacks, with about 100 pages of Pattern Recognition written, Gibson had to re-write the main character's backstory, which had been suddenly rendered implausible; he called it "the strangest experience I've ever had with a piece of fiction."[62] He saw the attacks as a nodal point in history, "an experience out of culture",[63] and "in some ways... the true beginning of the 21st century."[17] He is noted as one of the first novelists to use the attacks to inform his writing.[25] Examination of cultural changes in post-September 11th America, including a resurgent tribalism and the "infantilization of society",[64][65] became a prominent theme of Gibson's work.[66] The focus of his writing nevertheless remains "at the intersection of paranoia and technology".[67] In 2008, Gibson received honorary doctorates from Simon Fraser University and Coastal Carolina University, [68] and was inducted into the Science Fiction Hall of Fame by close friend and collaborator Jack Womack.[69]
[edit] Collaborations, adaptations and miscellanea
[edit] Literary collaborations
Three of the stories that later appeared in Burning Chrome were written in collaboration with other authors: "The Belonging Kind" (1981) with John Shirley, "Red Star, Winter Orbit" (1983) with Bruce Sterling,[4] and "Dogfight" (1985) with Michael Swanwick. Gibson had previously written the foreword to Shirley's 1980 novel City Come A-walkin'[70] and the pair's collaboration continued when Gibson wrote the introduction to Shirley's short story collection Heatseeker (1989).[71] Shirley convinced Gibson to write a story for the television series Max Headroom for which Shirley had written several scripts, but the network canceled the series.[72]
Gibson and Sterling collaborated again on the short story "The Angel of Goliad" in 1990,[71] which they soon expanded into the novel-length alternate history story The Difference Engine (1990). The two were later "invited to dream in public" (Gibson) in a joint address to the U.S. National Academy of Sciences Convocation on Technology and Education in 1993 ("the Al Gore people"[72]), in which they argued against the digital divide[73] and "appalled everyone" by proposing that all schools be put online, with education taking place over the Internet.[74] In a 2007 interview, Gibson revealed that Sterling had an idea for "a second recursive science novel that was just a wonderful idea", but that Gibson was unable to pursue the collaboration due to his not being creatively free at the time.[56]
In 1993, Gibson contributed lyrics and featured as a guest vocalist on Yellow Magic Orchestra's Technodon album,[75][76] and wrote lyrics to the track "Dog Star Girl" for Deborah Harry's Debravation.[77]
[edit] Film adaptations, screenplays and appearances
Gibson's early efforts to write film scripts failed to manifest themselves as finished product; "Burning Chrome" (which was to be directed by Kathryn Bigelow) and "Neuro-Hotel", for example, were two attempts by the author at film adaptations that were never made.[72] In the late 1980s he wrote an early version of Alien³ (which he later characterized as "Tarkovskian"), few elements of which survived in the final version.[72] Gibson's early involvement with the film industry extended far beyond the confines of the Hollywood blockbuster system. At one point, he collaborated on a script with Kazakh director Rashid Nugmanov after an American producer had expressed an interest in a Soviet-American collaboration to star Russian-Korean star Victor Tsoi.[78] Despite being occupied with writing a novel, Gibson was reluctant to abandon the "wonderfully odd project" which involved "ritualistic gang-warfare in some sort of sideways-future Leningrad" and sent Jack Womack to Russia in his stead. Rather than producing a motion picture, a prospect that ended after Tsoi's death in an automotive accident, Womack's experiences in Russia ultimately culminated in his novel Let's Put the Future Behind Us and informed much of the Russian content of Gibson's Pattern Recognition.[78] A similarly doomed fate befell Gibson's mooted collaboration with Japanese filmmaker Sogo Ishii in 1991,[34] a film they plotted on shooting in the Walled City of Kowloon prior to its demolition by the Chinese government.[11]
Adaptations of Gibson's fiction have frequently been optioned and proposed, to limited success. Two of the author's short stories, both set in the Sprawl trilogy universe, have been loosely adapted as films: Johnny Mnemonic (1995) with screenplay by Gibson and starring Keanu Reeves, Dolph Lundgren and Takeshi Kitano, and New Rose Hotel (1998), starring Christopher Walken, Willem Dafoe, and Asia Argento. The former was the first time in history that a book was launched simultaneously as a film and a CD-ROM interactive video game.[53] Neuromancer, after a long stay in development hell, is in the process of adaptation as of 2007,[79] Count Zero was at one point being developed as The Zen Differential with director Michael Mann attached, and the third novel in the Sprawl trilogy, Mona Lisa Overdrive, has also been optioned and bought.[80] An anime adaptation of Idoru was announced as in development in 2006,[81] and Pattern Recognition was in the process of development by director Peter Weir, although according to Gibson the latter is no longer attached to the project.[82] Television is another arena in which Gibson has collaborated; he co-wrote with friend Tom Maddox, the X-Files episodes "Kill Switch" and "First Person Shooter", broadcasted in the U.S. on 20th Century Fox Television in 1998 and 2000.[83][45] In 1998 he contributed the introduction to the spin-off publication Art of the X-Files. Gibson made a cameo appearance in the television miniseries Wild Palms at the behest of creator Bruce Wagner.[84] Director Oliver Stone had borrowed heavily from Gibson's novels to make the series,[50] and in the aftermath of its cancellation Gibson contributed an article, "Where The Holograms Go", to the Wild Palms Reader.[84] He accepted another acting role in 2002, appearing alongside Douglas Coupland in the short film Mon Amour Mon Parapluie in which the pair played philosophers.[85] Appearances in fiction aside, Gibson was the focus of a biographical documentary film by Mark Neale in 2000 called No Maps for These Territories. The documentary follows Gibson over the course of a drive across North America discussing various aspects of his life, literary career and cultural interpretations. It features interviews with Jack Womack and Bruce Sterling, as well as recitations from Neuromancer by Bono and The Edge.[23]
[edit] Exhibitions, poetry and performance art
Gibson has contributed text to be integrated into a number of performance art pieces. In October 1989, Gibson wrote text for such a collaboration with acclaimed sculptor and future Johnny Mnemonic director Robert Longo[44] titled Dream Jumbo: Working the Absolutes, which was displayed in Royce Hall, University of California Los Angeles. Three years later, Gibson contributed original text to "Memory Palace", a performance show featuring the theater group La Fura dels Baus at Art Futura '92, Barcelona, which featured images by Karl Sims, Rebecca Allen, Mark Pellington with music by Peter Gabriel and others.[75] It was at Art Futura '92 that Gibson met Charlie Athanas, who would later act as dramaturg and "cyberprops" designer on Steve Pickering and Charley Sherman's adaptation of "Burning Chrome" for the Chicago stage. Gibson's latest contribution was in 1997, a collaboration with critically acclaimed Vancouver-based contemporary dance company Holy Body Tattoo and Gibson's friend and future webmaster Christopher Halcrow.[86]
In 1990, Gibson contributed to "Visionary San Francisco", an exhibition at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art shown from June 14 to August 26.[87] He wrote a short story, "Skinner's Room", set in a decaying San Francisco in which the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge was closed and taken over by the homeless – a setting Gibson then detailed in the Bridge trilogy. The story inspired a contribution to the exhibition by architects Ming Fung and Craig Hodgetts that envisioned a San Francisco in which the rich live in high-tech, solar-powered towers, above the decrepit city and its crumbling bridge.[88] The architects exhibit featured Gibson on a monitor discussing the future and reading from "Skinner's Room".[75] The New York Times hailed the exhibition as "one of the most ambitious, and admirable, efforts to address the realm of architecture and cities that any museum in the country has mounted in the last decade", despite calling Ming and Hodgetts's reaction to Gibson's contribution "a powerful, but sad and not a little cynical, work".[88] A slightly different version of the short story was featured a year later in Omni.[89]
A particularly well-received work by Gibson was Agrippa (A Book of the Dead) (1992), a 300-line semi-autobiographical electronic poem that was his contribution to a collaborative project with artist Dennis Ashbaugh and publisher Kevin Begos, Jr.[90] Gibson's text focused on the ethereal nature of memories (the title refers to a photo album) and was originally published on a 3.5" floppy disk embedded in the back of an artist's book containing etchings by Ashbaugh (intended to fade from view once the book was opened and exposed to light – they never did, however). Gibson commented that Ashbaugh's design "eventually included a supposedly self-devouring floppy-disk intended to display the text only once, then eat itself."[91] Contrary to numerous colorful reports, the diskettes were never actually "hacked"; instead the poem was manually transcribed from a surreptitious videotape of a public showing in Manhattan in December 1992, and released on the MindVox BBS the next day; this is the text that circulated widely on the Internet.[92]
[edit] Journalism
Gibson is a sporadic contributor to Wired, and has written for The Observer, Addicted to Noise, New York Times Magazine and Rolling Stone. He commenced writing a blog in January 2003, providing voyeuristic insights into his reaction to Pattern Recognition, but abated in September of the same year due to concerns that it might negatively affect his creative process.[93][94] Gibson re-commenced blogging in October 2004, and during the process of writing Spook Country frequently posted short nonsequential excerpts from the novel to the blog.[95][96][97]
[edit] Influence and recognition
Hailed by The Guardian in 1999 as "probably the most important novelist of the past two decades" in terms of influence,[55] Gibson first achieved critical recognition with his debut novel, Neuromancer. The novel won three major science fiction awards (the Nebula Award, the Philip K. Dick Award, and the Hugo Award), an unprecedented achievement described by the Mail & Guardian as "the sci-fi writer's version of winning the Goncourt, Booker and Pulitzer prizes in the same year".[53] Neuromancer gained unprecedented critical and popular attention outside science fiction,[8] as an "evocation of life in the late 1980s",[98] although The Observer noted that "it took the New York Times 10 years" to mention the novel.[21]
His work received international attention[19] from an audience that was not limited to science fiction aficionados as, in the words of Laura Miller, "readers found startlingly prophetic reflections of contemporary life in [its] fantastic and often outright paranoid scenarios."[99] It is often situated by critics within the context of postindustrialism as, according to academic David Brande, a construction of "a mirror of existing large-scale techno-social relations",[100] and as a narrative version of postmodern consumer culture.[101] It is praised by critics for its depictions of late capitalism[100] and its "rewriting of subjectivity, human consciousness and behaviour made newly problematic by technology."[101] Tatiani Rapatzikou, writing in The Literary Encyclopedia, identifies Gibson as "one of North America's most highly acclaimed science fiction writers".[19]
[edit] Cultural significance
William Gibson - the man who made us cool.
—cyberpunk author Richard K Morgan[14]
In his early short fiction, Gibson is credited by Rapatzikou in The Literary Encyclopedia with effectively renovating science fiction, a genre at that time considered widely "insignificant",[19] influencing by means of the postmodern aesthetic of his writing the development of new perspectives in science fiction studies.[40] In the words of filmmaker Marianne Trench, Gibson's visions "struck sparks in the real world" and "determined the way people thought and talked" to an extent unprecedented in science fiction literature.[102] The publication of Neuromancer (1984) hit a cultural nerve,[40] causing Larry McCaffery to credit Gibson with virtually launching the cyberpunk movement,[8] as "the one major writer who is original and gifted to make the whole movement seem original and gifted."[34] Aside from their central importance to cyberpunk and steampunk fiction, Gibson's fictional works have been hailed by space historian Dwayne A. Day as some of the best examples of space-based science fiction (or "solar sci-fi"), and "probably the only ones that rise above mere escapism to be truly thought-provoking".[103]
Gibson's early novels were, according to The Observer, "seized upon by the emerging slacker and hacker generation as a kind of road map".[21] Through his novels, such terms as cyberspace, netsurfing, ICE, jacking in, and neural implants entered popular usage, as did concepts such as net consciousness, virtual interaction and "the matrix".[105] In "Burning Chrome" (1982), he coined the term cyberspace,[IV] referring to the "mass consensual hallucination" of computer networks.[106] Through its use in Neuromancer, the term gained such recognition that it became the de facto term for the World Wide Web during the 1990s.[107] Artist Dike Blair has commented that Gibson's "terse descriptive phrases capture the moods which surround technologies, rather than their engineering."[108]
Gibson's work has influenced several popular musicians: references to his fiction appear in the music of Stuart Hamm,[I] Billy Idol,[II] Warren Zevon,[III] Deltron 3030, Straylight Run[109] and Sonic Youth. U2's Zooropa album was heavily influenced by Neuromancer,[48] and the band at one point planned to scroll the text of Neuromancer above them on a concert tour, although this did not end up happening. Members of the band did, however, provide background music for the audiobook version of Neuromancer as well as appearing in No Maps for These Territories, a biographical documentary of Gibson.[110] He returned the favour by writing an article about the band's Vertigo Tour for Wired in August 2005.[111]
The landmark cyberpunk film The Matrix (1999), drew inspiration for its title, characters and story elements from the Sprawl trilogy.[112] The characters of Neo and Trinity in The Matrix are similar to Bobby Newmark (Count Zero) and Molly ("Johnny Mnemonic", Neuromancer).[80] Like Turner, protagonist of Gibson's Count Zero, characters in The Matrix download instructions (to fly a helicopter and to "know kung fu", respectively) directly into their heads, and both Neuromancer and The Matrix feature artificial intelligences which strive to free themselves from human control.[80] Critics have identified marked similarities between Neuromancer and the film's cinematography and tone.[113] Despite being initially reticent about seeing the film on its release,[23] Gibson later described it as "arguably the ultimate 'cyberpunk' artifact."[1]
[edit] Visionary influence and prescience
The future is already here – it's just not evenly distributed.
—William Gibson, quoted in The Economist, December 4, 2003[114]
In Neuromancer, Gibson first used the term "matrix" to refer to the visualised Internet, two years after the nascent Internet was formed in the early 1980s from the computer networks of the 1970s.[115][116][117] In this conception of the "matrix", he predicted a worldwide communications network eleven years before the origin of the World Wide Web,[45] although related notions had been described elsewhere.[V] At the time he wrote "Burning Chrome", Gibson "had a hunch that [the Internet] would change things, in the same way that the ubiquity of the automobile changed things."[23] In 1995, he identified the advent, evolution and growth of the Internet as "one of the most fascinating and unprecedented human achievements of the century", a new kind of civilization that is – in terms of significance – on a par with the birth of cities,[74] and in 2000 predicted it would lead to the death of the nation state.[23]
Observers contend that Gibson's influence on the development of the Web reached beyond prediction; he is widely credited with creating an iconography for the information age, long before the embrace of the Internet by the mainstream.[26] His influence on early pioneers of desktop environment digital art has been acknowledged,[118] and he holds an honorary doctorate from Parsons The New School for Design.[119] Larry McCaffery claims that in writing the Sprawl trilogy Gibson laid the "conceptual foundations for the explosive real-world growth of virtual environments in videogames and the Web".[55] In his afterword to the 2000 re-issue of Neuromancer, fellow author Jack Womack suggests that Gibson's vision of cyberspace may have inspired the way in which the Internet (and the Web particularly) developed, following the publication of Neuromancer in 1984, asking "what if the act of writing it down, in fact, brought it about?"[120]
Gibson scholar Tatiani G. Rapatzikou has commented, in Gothic Motifs in the Fiction of William Gibson, on the origin of the notion of cyberspace:
Gibson's vision, generated by the monopolising appearance of the terminal image and presented in his creation of the cyberspace matrix, came to him when he saw teenagers playing in video arcades. The physical intensity of their postures, and the realistic interpretation of the terminal spaces projected by these games – as if there were a real space behind the screen – made apparent the manipulation of the real by its own representation.[121]
In his Sprawl and Bridge trilogies, Gibson is credited with being one of the few observers to explore the portents of the information age for notions of the sociospatial structuring of cities.[122] Not all responses to Gibson's visions have been positive, however; virtual reality pioneer Mark Pesce, though acknowledging their heavy influence on him and that "no other writer had so eloquently and emotionally effected the direction of the hacker community,"[123] dismissed them as "adolescent fantasies of violence and disembodiment".[124] In Pattern Recognition, the plot revolves around snippets of film footage posted anonymously to various locations on the Internet. Characters in the novel speculate about the filmmaker's identity, motives, methods and inspirations on several websites, anticipating the 2006 Lonelygirl15 internet phenomenon. However, Gibson later disputed the notion that the creators of Lonelygirl15 drew influence from him.[125] Another phenomenon anticipated by Gibson is the rise of reality television,[10] for example in Virtual Light, which featured a satirical extrapolated version of COPS.[126]
Visionary writer is OK. Prophet is just not true. One of the things that made me like Bruce Sterling immediately when first I met him, back in 1991. We shook hands and he said "We’ve got a great job ! We got to be charlatans and we’re paid for it. We make this shit up and people believe it."
—Gibson in interview with ActuSf, March 2008.[65]
For his part, Gibson rejects any notion of prophecy, never having had a special relationship with computers – until 1996 he did not have an email address, or even a modem, which he claimed at the time was motivated by a desire to avoid correspondence that would distract him from writing.[74] His first exposure to a website came while writing Idoru when he was persuaded to let a web developer, Chris Halcrow, build one for him.[7] An anecdote often recited in cybercultural enclaves and English departments holds that Neuromancer was written on a manual typewriter;[127] the author has confirmed that the novel was written on a 1927 model of an olive-green Hermes portable typewriter, which looked to him as "the kind of thing Hemingway would have used in the field".[53] In 2007 he said:
I have a 2005 PowerBook G4, a gig of memory, wireless router. That's it. I'm anything but an early adopter, generally. In fact, I've never really been very interested in computers themselves. I don't watch them; I watch how people behave around them. That's becoming more difficult to do because everything is "around them".[58]
[edit] Selected bibliography
|
|
[edit] Further reading
- Olsen, Lance (1992). William Gibson. San Bernardino: Borgo Press. ISBN 1557421986. OCLC 27254726.
- Cavallaro, Dani (2000). Cyberpunk and Cyberculture. London: Athlone Press. ISBN 9780485006070. OCLC 43751735.
- Tatsumi, Takayuki (2006). Full Metal Apache: Transactions between Cyberpunk Japan and Avant-Pop America. Durham: Duke University Press. ISBN 9780822337744. OCLC 63125607.
- Yoke, Carl (2007). The Cultural Influences of William Gibson, the "Father" of Cyberpunk Science Fiction. Lewiston, New York: Edwin Mellen Pr. ISBN 9780773454675. OCLC 173809083.
[edit] Footnotes
I. ^ Several track names on Hamm's Kings of Sleep album ("Black Ice", "Count Zero", "Kings of Sleep") reference Gibson's work.[128]
II. ^ Idol released an album in 1993 titled Cyberpunk, which featured a track named Neuromancer.[48] Robert Christgau excoriated Idol's treatment of cyberpunk,[129] and Gibson later stated that Idol had "turned it into something very silly."[72]
III. ^ Zevon's 1989 album Transverse City was inspired by Gibson's fiction.[130]
IV. ^ Gibson later successfully resisted attempts by Autodesk to copyright the word for their abortive foray into virtual reality.[48]
V. ^ The idea of a globally interconnected set of computers through which everyone could quickly access data and programs from any site was first described in 1962 in a series of memos on the "Galactic Computer Network" by J.C.R. Licklider of DARPA.[131]
VI. ^ The New York Times Magazine[22] and Gibson himself[20] report his age at the time of his father's death to be six years old, while Gibson scholar Tatiani Rapatzikou claims in The Literary Encyclopedia that he was eight years old.[19]
[edit] References
- ^ a b c Gibson, William (2003-01-28). The Matrix: Fair Cop. Retrieved on 2007-11-04.
- ^ a b Gibson, William (2007-01-13). Philip K. Dick. Retrieved on 2007-11-04.
- ^ a b Gibson, William (July 2005). God's Little Toys:Confessions of a cut & paste artist. Wired.com. Retrieved on 2007-11-04.
- ^ a b c Garreau, Joel. "Through the Looking Glass", The Washington Post, 2007-09-06. Retrieved on 2007-10-30.
- ^ Rapp, Alan E. (1999-04-29). You Can Never Read Too Much Into It. Arts & Entertainment. Salon.com. Retrieved on 2007-11-06.
- ^ Gibson, William (2003-01-18). Influences Generally. Retrieved on 2007-11-26.
- ^ a b Rosenberg, Scott. William Gibson Webmaster. The Salon Interview. Salon.com. Retrieved on 2007-11-06.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o McCaffery, Larry [1991]. "An Interview with William Gibson", Storming the Reality Studio: a casebook of cyberpunk and postmodern science fiction. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press, pp. 263–285. ISBN 9780822311683. OCLC 23384573. Retrieved on 2007-11-05.
- ^ Tatsumi, Takayuki (1988). Saibapanku Amerika =: Cyberpunk America (in Japanese). Tokyo: Keiso Shobo. ISBN 9784326098248. OCLC 22493233.
- ^ a b c d Parker, T. Virgil (Summer 2007). "William Gibson: Sci-Fi Icon Becomes Prophet of the Present". College Crier 6 (2).
- ^ a b Gibson, William (2006-07-21). Burst City Trailer. Retrieved on 2007-11-26.
- ^ Call, Lewis, "Anarchy in the Matrix: Postmodern Anarchism in the Novels of William Gibson and Bruce Sterling", Anarchist Studies, Volume 7, No. 2.
- ^ a b Dyer-Bennet, Cynthia. Cory Doctorow Talks About Nearly Everything. Inkwell: Authors and Artists. The Well. Retrieved on 2007-08-30.
- ^ a b c Morgan, Richard. Recommended Reading List. Retrieved on 2007-11-05.
- ^ Charles Stross' dense stories have made him a Singularity sensation. Scifi.com. Retrieved on 2007-11-22.
- ^ Gibson, William. "Modern boys and mobile girls", The Japan issue, The Observer, 2001-04-01. Retrieved on 2007-10-28.
- ^ a b Bennie, Angela (2007-09-07). A reality stranger than fiction. Sydney Morning Herald. Fairfax Media. Retrieved on 2008-01-21.
- ^ a b c Marshall, John. "William Gibson's new novel asks, is the truth stranger than science fiction today?", Books, Seattle Post-Intelligencer, 2003-02-06. Retrieved on 2007-11-03.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Rapatzikou, Tatiani (2003-06-17). "William Gibson.". The Literary Encyclopedia. The Literary Dictionary Company. Retrieved on 2007-08-27.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Gibson, William (2002-11-06). "Since 1948". Retrieved on 2007-11-04.
- ^ a b c d e f Adams, Tim; Emily Stokes, James Flint (2007-08-12). Space to think. Books by genre. The Observer. Retrieved on 2007-10-26.
- ^ a b c Solomon, Deborah. "Back From the Future", Questions for William Gibson, The New York Times Magazine, 2007-08-19, pp. 13. Retrieved on 2007-10-13.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Mark Neale (director), William Gibson (subject). (2000). No Maps for These Territories [Documentary]. Docurama.
- ^ Maddox, Tom (1989). Maddox on Gibson. Retrieved on 2007-10-26. “This story originally appeared in a Canadian 'zine, Virus 23, 1989.”
- ^ a b Wiebe, Joe. "Writing Vancouver", Special to the Sun, The Vancouver Sun, 2007-10-13. Retrieved on 2008-02-01.
- ^ a b Leonard, Andrew (February 2001). Riding shotgun with William Gibson. Salon.com. Retrieved on 2007-11-06.
- ^ Gibson, William. Interview with Annalee Newitz. William Gibson Talks to io9 About Canada, Draft Dodging, and Godzilla. io9. San Francisco. June 10, 2008.. Retrieved on 2008-06-10.
- ^ (1967-09-04). Yorkville: Hippie haven (14 min Windows Media Video; "This is Bill" appears first after 0:45). Rochdale College: Organized anarchy (16 min radio recording Windows Media Audio; interviews start after 4:11). Yorkville, Toronto: CBC.ca. Retrieved on 2008-02-01.
- ^ Gibson, William (2003-05-01). That CBC Archival Footage. Retrieved on 2007-11-26.
- ^ a b Gibson, William (January 1999). "My Obsession". Wired.com (7.01).
- ^ Mike Rogers (1993-10-01). In Same Universe. Lysator Sweden Science Fiction Archive. Archived from the original on 2007-04-19. Retrieved on 2007-11-06.
- ^ "UBC Alumni: The First Cyberpunk" (2004-03-04). UBC Reports 50 (3). Vancouver, Canada: University of British Columbia.
- ^ a b Calcutt, Andrew (1999). Cult Fiction. Chicago: Contemporary Books. ISBN 9780809225064. OCLC 42363052.
- ^ a b c d e f g h McCaffery, Larry (1991). Storming the Reality Studio: a casebook of cyberpunk and postmodern science fiction. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press. ISBN 9780822311683. OCLC 23384573.
- ^ a b c Shiner, Lewis; George Edgar Slusser, Tom Shippey (1992). "Inside the Movement: Past, Present and Future", Fiction 2000:Cyberpunk and the Future of Narrative. Athens: University of Georgia Press. ISBN 9780820314259. OCLC 24953403.
- ^ Bould, Mark (2005). "Cyberpunk", in David Seed: A Companion to Science Fiction. Blackwell Publishing Professional, 217–218. ISBN 9781405112185. OCLC 56924865.
- ^ Gibson, William; Bruce Sterling (1986). "Introduction", Burning Chrome. New York: Harper Collins. ISBN 0060539828. OCLC 51342671.
- ^ Gibson, William (2003-09-04). Neuromancer: The Timeline. Retrieved on 2007-11-26.
- ^ Gibson, William (2003-01-17). Oh Well, While I'm Here: Bladerunner. Retrieved on 2008-01-21.
- ^ a b c Hollinger, Veronica (July 1999). "Contemporary Trends in Science Fiction Criticism, 1980–1999". Science Fiction Studies 26 (78).
- ^ Cheng, Alastair. 77. Neuromancer (1984). The LRC 100: Canada's Most Important Books. Literary Review of Canada. Retrieved on 2007-09-09.
- ^ Person, Lawrence (Winter/Spring 1998). "Notes Toward a Postcyberpunk Manifesto". Nova Express 4 (4).
- ^ Grossman, Lev; Richard Lacayo. Neuromancer (1984). TIME Magazine All-Time 100 Novels. Time. Retrieved on 2007-11-06.
- ^ a b van Bakel, Rogier (June 1995). "Remembering Johnny". Wired (3.06).
- ^ a b c Johnston, Antony (August 1999). "William Gibson : All Tomorrow’s Parties : Waiting For The Man". Spike Magazine.
- ^ Gibson, William (2003-01-01). (untitled weblog post). Retrieved on 2008-01-21.
- ^ Gibson, William (2005-08-15). The Log of the Mustang Sally. Retrieved on 2008-01-21.
- ^ a b c d Bolhafner, J. Stephen (March 1994). "William Gibson interview". Starlog (200).
- ^ Bebergal, Peter. "The age of steampunk", The Boston Globe, 2007-08-26, p. 3. Retrieved on 2007-10-14.
- ^ a b Platt, Adam. "Cyberhero", The Talk of the Town, The New Yorker, 1993-09-16, p. 24. Retrieved on 2007-11-06. Archived from the original on 1999-02-23.
- ^ Alexander, Scott (2007-08-09). Spook Country. Arts & Entertainment. Playboy.com. Retrieved on 2007-11-06.
- ^ Leonard, Andrew (1999-07-27). An engine of anarchy. Books. Salon.com.
- ^ a b c d Walker, Martin (1996-09-03). Blade Runner on electro-steroids. Mail & Guardian Online. M&G Media. Retrieved on 2007-11-11.
- ^ Leonard, Andrew (1998-09-14). Is cyberpunk still breathing?. Salon.com. Retrieved on 2007-11-06.
- ^ a b c Poole, Steven. "Nearing the nodal", Books by genre, The Guardian. Retrieved on 2007-11-03.
- ^ a b Dueben, Alex (2007-10-02). An Interview With William Gibson The Father of Cyberpunk. California Literary Review. Retrieved on 2007-10-04.
- ^ Clute, John. The Case of the World. Excessive Candour. SciFi.com. Retrieved on 2007-10-14.
- ^ a b Chang, Angela (2007-01-10). "Q&A: William Gibson". PC Magazine 26 (3).
- ^ Hirst, Christopher (2003-05-10). Books: Hardbacks. The Independent. Retrieved on 2007-07-08.
- ^ Lim, Dennis (2007-08-11). Now Romancer. Salon.com. Retrieved on 2007-10-30.
- ^ Sutherland, John. "Node idea", Guardian Unlimited, Guardian Media Group, 2007-08-31. Retrieved on 2007-11-11.
- ^ Lim, Dennis. "Think Different", The Village Voice, Village Voice Media, 2003-02-18. Retrieved on 2007-11-11.
- ^ Leonard, Andrew (2003-02-13). Nodal point. Salon.com. Retrieved on 2007-11-06.
- ^ William Gibson Hates Futurists. TheTyee.ca. Retrieved on 2007-10-26.
- ^ a b Gibson, William. Interview with Eric Holstein; Raoul Abdaloff. Interview de William Gibson VO (transcription). ActuSF. Paris. March 2008. Retrieved on 2008-04-06.
- ^ William Gibson with Spook Country. Studio One Bookclub. CBC British Columbia. Retrieved on 2007-10-26.
- ^ Gibson still scares up a spooky atmosphere. Providence Journal. Retrieved on 2007-10-26.
- ^ 'Cyberspace' coiner returns to native SC for honorary degree. Associated Press (2008-05-10). Retrieved on 2008-06-08.
- ^ Inductees Named for 2008 Science Fiction Hall of Fame. Empsfm.org. Experience Learning Community. Retrieved on 2008-06-08.
- ^ Gibson, William (1996-03-31). Foreword to City Come a-walkin'. Retrieved on 2007-05-01.
- ^ a b Brown, Charles N.; William G. Contento (2004-07-10). Stories, Listed by Author. The Locus Index to Science Fiction (1984–1998). Locus. Archived from the original on 2007-03-04. Retrieved on 2007-10-29.
- ^ a b c d e Gibson, William. Interview with Giuseppe Salza. Cannes. May 1994. (Interview). Retrieved on 2007-10-28.
- ^ Sterling, Bruce; William Gibson (1993-05-10). Speeches by William Gibson and Bruce Sterling at the National Academy of Sciences, Washington D.C. The WELL. Retrieved on 2007-10-29.
- ^ a b c Gibson, William. Interview with Dan Josefsson. I Don't Even Have A Modem. Rapport. TV2 Stockholm. 1994-11-03. Retrieved on 2007-11-05.
- ^ a b c S. Page. William Gibson Bibliography / Mediagraphy. Retrieved on 2008-02-09.
- ^ Yellow Magic Orchestra - Technodon. Discogs. Retrieved on 2008-01-10.
- ^ Pener, Degen. "EGOS & IDS; Deborah Harry Is Low-Key -- And Unblond", The New York Times, 1993-08-22. Retrieved on 2007-11-07.
- ^ a b Gibson, William (2003-03-06). Victor Tsoi. Retrieved on 2007-12-03.
- ^ Neuromancer comes. JoBlo.com. Retrieved on 2007-08-27.
- ^ a b c Loder, Kurt. The Matrix Preloaded. MTV's Movie House. Mtv.com. Retrieved on 2007-11-07.
- ^ William Gibson’s Idoru Coming to Anime. cyberpunkreview.com (2006-04-21).
- ^ Gibson, William (2007-05-01). I've Forgotten More Neuromancer Film Deals Than You've Ever Heard Of. Retrieved on 2007-11-04.
- ^ Fridman, Sherman (2000-02-24). "X-Files" Writer Fights For Online Privacy. News Briefs. Newsbytes PM. Archived from the original on 2004-09-22. Retrieved on 2007-07-13.
- ^ a b Gibson, William (2006-07-22). Where The Holograms Go. Retrieved on 2007-11-26.
- ^ Cast. Mon Amour Mon Parapluie. Retrieved on 2007-10-26.
- ^ Gibson, William (2003-05-31). Holy Body Tattoo. Retrieved on 2007-11-11.
- ^ Polledri, Paolo (1990). Visionary San Francisco. Munich: Prestal. ISBN 3791310607. OCLC 22115872.
- ^ a b Goldberger, Paul. "In San Francisco, A Good Idea Falls With a Thud", Architecture View, The New York Times, 1990-08-12. Retrieved on 2007-11-06.
- ^ Gibson, William (November 1991). "Skinner's Room". Omni.
- ^ Liu, Alan (2004-06-30). The laws of cool : knowledge work and the culture of information. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, pp. 339-48. ISBN 0226486982. OCLC 53823956.
- ^ Gibson, William (1992). Introduction to Agrippa: A Book of the Dead. Retrieved on 2007-11-11.
- ^ Kirschenbaum, Matthew G. [2008]. "Hacking ‘Agrippa’: The Source of the Online Text.", Mechanisms : new media and the forensic imagination, 2, Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. ISBN 9780262113113. OCLC 79256819. Retrieved on 2007-11-11.
- ^ Orlowski, Andrew. "William Gibon 'gives up blogging'", Music and Media, The Register, 2003-04-25. Retrieved on 2007-11-03.
- ^ Gibson, William (2003-09-12). Endgame. Retrieved on 2007-11-26.
- ^ Gibson, William (2006-06-01). Moor. Retrieved on 2007-11-04.
- ^ Gibson, William (2006-09-23). Johnson Bros.. Retrieved on 2007-11-04.
- ^ Gibson, William (2006-10-03). Their Different Drummer. Retrieved on 2007-11-04.
- ^ Fitting, Peter [July 1991]. "The Lessons of Cyberpunk", in Penley, C. & Ross, A. (eds.): Technoculture. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 295–315. ISBN 0816619301. OCLC 22859126. “[Gibson's work] has attracted an audience from outside, people who read it as a poetic evocation of life in the late eighties rather than as science fiction.”
- ^ Miller, Laura (2000). "Introduction", The Salon. Com Reader's Guide to Contemporary Authors. New York: Penguin Books. ISBN 9780140280883. OCLC 43384794.
- ^ a b Brande, David (1994). "The Business of Cyberpunk: Symbolic Economy and Ideology in William Gibson". Configurations 2 (3): 509 – 536.
- ^ a b Sponsler, Claire (Winter 1992) "Cyberpunk and the Dilemmas of Postmodern Narrative: The Example of William Gibson" in Contemporary Literature Volume 33 (4), pages 625–644. DOI:10.2307/1208645. Retrieved on 2007-08-27
- ^ Trench, Marianne and Peter von Brandenburg, producers. 1992. Cyberpunk. Mystic Fire Video: Intercon Productions.
- ^ Day, Dwayne A. (2008-04-21). Miles to go before the Moon. The Space Review. Retrieved on 2008-04-21.
- ^ Writing Fiction in the Age of Google: William Gibson Q&A, Part 3. Amazon Bookstore's Blog. Amazon.com (2007-06-24). Retrieved on 2007-11-04.
- ^ Doherty, Michael E., Jr. (September 1995). "Marshall McLuhan Meets William Gibson in "Cyberspace"". CMC Magazine.
- ^ Prucher, Jeff (2007). Brave New Words: The Oxford Dictionary of Science Fiction. Oxford University Press, 31. ISBN 9780195305678. OCLC 76074298.
- ^ Irvine, Martin (1997-01-12). Postmodern Science Fiction and Cyberpunk. Retrieved on 2006-11-23.
- ^ “Liquid Science Fiction: Interview with William Gibson by Bernard Joisten and Ken Lum”, Purple Prose, (Paris), N°9, été, pp.10–16
- ^ Straylight Run. MTV.com. Retrieved on 2007-09-09.
- ^ GPod Audio Books: Neuromancer by William Gibson. GreyLodge Podcast Publishing company. Retrieved on 2007-04-09.
- ^ Gibson, William. "U2's City of Blinding Lights" (2005), Wired, 13.8
- ^ Hepfer, Karl (2001). "The Matrix Problem I: The Matrix, Mind and Knowledge". Erfurt Electronic Studies in English. ISSN 1430-6905.
- ^ Blackford, Russell (July 2004). "Reading the Ruined Cities". Science Fiction Studies 31 (93).
- ^ "Books of the year 2003", Books & Arts, The Economist, 2003-12-04. Retrieved on 2007-08-06.
- ^ Postel, J., Network Working Group (November 1981). RFC 801 - NCP/TCP Transition Plan. Information Sciences Institute of the University of Southern California. Retrieved on 2007-10-31.
- ^ Zakon, Robert H (2006-11-01). Hobbes' Internet Timeline v8.2. Zakon Group LLC. Retrieved on 2007-10-31.
- ^ Matrix. Netlingo. Retrieved on 2007-09-09.
- ^ Kahney, Leander (2002-11-14). Early Desktop Pic Ahead of Time. Wired. Retrieved on 2008-01-10.
- ^ Sci-Fi Writer, High-Tech Marketer on Awards Jury. Mediacaster (2008-04-03). Retrieved on 2008-04-21.
- ^ Gibson, William; Jack Womack (2004). Neuromancer. New York: Ace Books, 269. ISBN 9780441012039. OCLC 55745255.
- ^ Rapatzikou, Tatiani (2004). Gothic Motifs in the Fiction of William Gibson. Amsterdam: Rodopi. ISBN 9789042017610. OCLC 55807961.
- ^ Dear, Michael; Steven Flusty (March 1998). "Postmodern Urbanism". Annals of the Association of American Geographers 88 (1): 50–72. doi: .
- ^ Pesce, Mark. Magic Mirror: The Novel as a Software Development Platform. MIT Communications Forum. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Retrieved on 2007-12-02.
- ^ Pesce, Mark (1998-07-13). 3-D epiphany. Salon.com. Retrieved on 2007-11-06.
- ^ August 14, 2006 edition of the free daily Metro International, interview by Amy Benfer (amybenfer (at) metro.us)
- ^ Gibson, William (2003-09-03). Humility and Prescience. Salon.com. Retrieved on 2007-11-26.
- ^ Bukatman, Scott (2003). "Gibson's Typewriter", Matters of Gravity. Durham: Duke University Press. ISBN 9780822331193. OCLC 51058973.
- ^ (1989) Album notes for Kings of Sleep by Stuart Hamm [CD liner]. Relativity Records. Kings of Sleep at MusicBrainz.
- ^ Christgau, Robert (1993-08-10). Virtual Hep. Village Voice. Retrieved on 2007-11-11.
- ^ Cook, Bob (2002-02-10). Requiem for a Rock Satirist. Flak Magazine. Retrieved on 2007-11-11.
- ^ Barry M. Leiner, Vinton G. Cerf, David D. Clark, Robert E. Kahn, Leonard Kleinrock, Daniel C. Lynch, Jon Postel, Larry G. Roberts, Stephen Wolff (2003-12-10). "A Brief History of the Internet". 3.32. . Internet Society Retrieved on 2007-11-03.
[edit] External links
- Official sites
- http://www.WilliamGibsonbooks.com – personal website
- References
- Works by or about William Gibson in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
- William Gibson at the Internet Movie Database
- William Gibson at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- Project Cyberpunk's biography and links
- Bibliography of Works By William Gibson. Centre for Language and Literature. Athabasca University.
- Notable fan sites
- William Gibson Aleph An extensive fan site
- Synaptic Response Formerly neuromancer.ca
|
Persondata | |
---|---|
NAME | Gibson, William |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | Speculative fiction author, cyberpunk pioneer |
DATE OF BIRTH | March 17, 1948 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Conway, South Carolina |
DATE OF DEATH | |
PLACE OF DEATH |