person:frank herbert

  • Why the Culture Wins: An Appreciation of Iain M. Banks – Sci Phi Journal
    http://sciphijournal.org/why-the-culture-wins-an-appreciation-of-iain-m-banks

    Compared to the other “visionary” writers working at the time – William Gibson, Neal Stephenson – Banks is underappreciated. This is because Gibson and Stephenson in certain ways anticipated the evolution of technology, and considered what the world would look like as transformed by “cyberspace.” Both were crucial in helping us to understand that the real technological revolution occurring in our society was not mechanical, but involved the collection, transmission and processing of information.

    Banks, by contrast, imagined a future transformed by the evolution of culture first and foremost, and by technology only secondarily. His insights were, I would contend, more profound. But they are less well appreciated, because the dynamics of culture surround us so completely, and inform our understanding of the world so entirely, that we struggle to find a perspective from which we can observe the long-term trends.

    In fact, modern science fiction writers have had so little to say about the evolution of culture and society that it has become a standard trope of the genre to imagine a technologically advanced future that contains archaic social structures. The most influential example of this is undoubtedly Frank Herbert’s Dune, which imagines an advanced galactic civilization, but where society is dominated by warring “houses,” organized as extended clans, all under the nominal authority of an “emperor.” Part of the appeal obviously lies in the juxtaposition of a social structure that belongs to the distant past – one that could be lifted, almost without modification, from a fantasy novel – and futuristic technology.

    Such a postulate can be entertaining, to the extent that it involves a dramatic rejection of Marx’s view, that the development of the forces of production drives the relations of production (“The hand-mill gives you society with the feudal lord; the steam-mill, society with the industrial capitalist.”1). Put in more contemporary terms, Marx’s claim is that there are functional relations between technology and social structure, so that you can’t just combine them any old way. Marx was, in this regard, certainly right, hence the sociological naiveté that lies at the heart of Dune. Feudalism with energy weapons makes no sense – a feudal society could not produce energy weapons, and energy weapons would undermine feudal social relations.

  • To Save California, Read “Dune” - Issue 25: Water
    http://nautil.us/issue/25/water/to-save-california-read-dune

    Fifty years ago science-fiction author Frank Herbert seized the imagination of readers with his portrayal of a planet on which it never rained. In the novel Dune, the scarcest resource is water, so much so that the mere act of shedding a tear or spitting on the floor takes on weighty cultural significance. To survive their permanent desert climate, the indigenous Fremen of Dune employ every possible technology. They build “windtraps” and “dew collectors” to grab the slightest precipitation out of the air. They construct vast underground cisterns and canals to store and transport their painstakingly gathered water. They harvest every drop of moisture from the corpses of the newly dead. During each waking moment they dress in “stillsuits”—head-to-toe wetsuit-like body coverings that recycle (...)

  • Warring Worlds of Fiction | Al Akhbar English
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/warring-worlds-fiction

    Islam has long served as a rich reservoir for sci-fi authors building complex and foreign worlds, with Frank Herbert’s 1966 Dune including dozens of allusions to Arabic terms, according to the Baheyeldin Dynasty blog. In an interview with Al-Akhbar, Hurley said that she wanted to escape the “old ‘atheist white guys in space’ narrative” that is so common in science fiction. She did just that through extensive research on topics as vast as guerrilla warfare and Assyria, as well as creating strong female and religious characters that fit well into a vaguely Muslim world. As God’s War shows, building a believable fantasy universe that alludes to Islam takes more effort than just throwing in a mosque and setting your novel in a desert.

    Ou quand la #littérature de fiction occidentale s’inspire de la culture #arabe.