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- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!tamsun.tamu.edu!tamu.edu!eschneid
- From: eschneid@sparc8.tamu.edu (Erich R Schneider)
- Newsgroups: alt.cyberpunk
- Subject: Re: What is cyberpunk?
- Date: 23 Jan 93 15:27:08
- Organization: Texas A&M University
- Lines: 30
- Message-ID: <ESCHNEID.93Jan23152708@sparc8.tamu.edu>
- References: <C1ApnA.2xC@panix.com>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: sparc8.cs.tamu.edu
- In-reply-to: rpowers@panix.com's message of Sat, 23 Jan 1993 07:18:46 GMT
-
- In article <C1ApnA.2xC@panix.com> rpowers@panix.com (Richard Powers) writes:
-
- >What I'd really like to know is: What is _not_ cyberpunk?
- >
- >What element(s) simply _do_not_ belong in cyberpunk? To be a little
- >more specific, lets discuss cyberpunk fiction. Define X such that if
- >X was a plot element in book Y, then book Y can not be cyberpunk.
- >
- >Or is there such a thing? Any ideas?
-
- I doubt that there are any concrete elements that would cause a work
- to not be considered cyberpunk, by their very inclusion. Cyberpunk
- works are considered so by a certain mix of writing style and subject
- matter. I think it's more useful to talk about the presence and use of
- cyberpunk-ish elements rather than to look for "anti-cyberpunk"
- elements.
-
- Almost any element can be incorporated into a cyberpunk work, if it is
- used in the spirit of the "mercenary, nilistic technofetishist, and
- practical joker". I can think of certain elements which will make a
- cyberpunk work less effective as cyberpunk, but none that will kill a
- work as cyberpunk outright.
-
- --
- Erich Schneider eschneid@cs.tamu.edu
-
- "Even the AI hated [my book]?"
- "The AI _loved_ it. That's when we knew for sure that _people_ were going
- to hate it."
- -Dan Simmons, _Hyperion_
-