CW: alienation, body horror, violence, capitalism, any of the other frightening stuff Cyberpunk weighs and deals with.

“We never see the face of power in Blade Runner. Instead, we see an errand boy, Gaff, but we never see the top level. And Deckard doesn't think about what he's doing, he doesn't really question it. Some power that is tells him to kill replicants, who might well essentially be people, but the whole point when he leaves with Rachel is that he doesn't save the replicants. He saves Rachel and goes away. That's not a hero's tale. That's somebody saving his skin and the skin of someone he cares about, but it's very cyberpunk. That idea of feeling that the chance that we have with each other, and the chance of a better life, is worth incurring the wrath of these unseen and mighty powers.”

Reading an interview with Pondsmith and I'd like to hear him elaborate on this. Because Deckard is the villian, the ruthless cop assassin hunting down the former slaves who are fighting to claim a life they were never supposed to have. Deckard doesn't save the replicants, the replicants save him. Roy has Deckard in his grasp, but at the end of his life he decides he's done killing, he doesn't need revenge, and lets Deckard go. Roy gives Deckard his freedom, gives Deckard his chance to stop being a cop, stop being a murderer, go be a human being for the first time in his life. So, I'd like to hear Pondsmith elaborate this because I'd like to know how he views Roy's role in the Drama.

Look at what's been going on in Russia right now and tell me the Soviet State isn't still around. They just changed the paint and got a new symbol.

Oh no he's a lib. : (

Still reading various takes (not just Pondsmith's). It's extremely weird to me that people think Deckard is the, idk, most important character in Blade Runner. He's mostly passive. He follows his orders like a good dog. He has no real agency. It's the replicants who have goals, agency, dreams, a future. Rick just exists.

OMG people whose opinions I'm reading, cyberpunk is about the alienation we experience due to our reliance on technology that is hostile to us. It's not about metal arms or cool hair, it's about how our increasingly high tech world is driving us all further and further apart, turning us in to machines ourselves, cogs in the corporate profit machine. Most of Gibson's stories are about a band of freaks and losers coming together, finding something like family, and briefly escaping that alienation while punching someone much bigger than them in the jaw. That is the core theme; Technology hasn't liberated us, it's both subjugated us and atomized us. It's not just about megacorps, it's about corporations, which is to say large power blocs that aren't accountable to anyone, which is to say capitalism, using tech to control us; by using violence against us, by controlling our labor, by stealing, hacking, subverting our attention. The central warning that the movement was screaming is that the furturist, positivist vision of a world where technology makes life free and easy wasn't coming, that our machines were becoming our jailers. The "punk" isn't about literal studded jackets and chelsea cuts and big black shitkickers, it's about an ethos of defiance, of indifference to authority, of viewing the system as something that exists outside you, that you're not part of and that cannot compel your obedience by any means but violence. The punk is being an outsider, a low life, a criminal, or just unemployed, in a world where the only way you get rights, healthcare, protection, real food, is selling you body and soul to a corporation. It's that "eat trash be free" meme with the racoon. In so far as there ever was an authentic punk, which is a subject of constant debate, the hand-made, ripped out, outlandish and offensive clothes were a symbolic refusal to participate, to be part of the machine. Most of them were never really outside, but that was what was desired, what was trying however ineptly to be accomplished. The individualistic helplessness of the punks, their inability to conceptualize revolution or take meaningful action against their society, was a reflection of the "what no theory does to a mf" of the desolate ideological wasteland of 80s suburbia.

V's fucking thrilled about her cyberware. You never see her saying "man I fucking hate these immune suppressants I've been shitting water since I got my first network implant". You never see her startle when she looks in the mirror and sees something that isn't her staring back. She never wakes up with bruises because she had a nightmare and hit herself with her own chromed up arms hard enough to leave marks. You don't see her cussing as she limps around trying to find her toolkit because the joints in her leg seized. you don't see her suffer.

Very enjoyable read. I loved that particular Rick Roderick lecture myself- he's fun to watch. I think there's one thing here that helps tie together several of the themes and tropes associated with Cyberpunk- whether machines/cyborgs/androids, virtual realities and the internet, postmodernism, etc, and that's the post-Marxist tradition of thought in which several of these themes originate. Marx was the one who tied together ideas about productive power, technology (automatons and proto-cybernetics specifically, too, which also manifested in the later Communist obsessions with cybernetics) qualitatively changing human experience, machines dominating humans, alienation in both the technical and mundane sense, vast income inequality (arguably a feature of all major cyberpunk to date,) due to runaway capitalism, and fears of oligopolies and megacorporations, all in that particular form that cyberpunk authors repeated, even if they weren't citing him specifically. Baudrillard and Lyotard are both working within a post-Marxian tradition as well, as their writings on postmodernism attest. Marxism always had an inherent connection to sci-fi (also see Star Trek, which has more than a little Marx in its DNA, too, but on the utopian end,) but I think Cyberpunk is specifically where Marxian themes can be found most directly in popular culture (which is of course not to suggest that these authors or works are Marxist themselves.)

I also bring this up more generally because a lot of people love Cyberpunk aesthetics and the anarchic, labyrinthine, high-tech and high-speed vision associated with a lot of it, and of course that stuff is cool in many ways, but it's also important to remember that Neuromancer, for example, is explicitly a dystopian novel, as that Rick Roderick lecture so wonderfully explains. That future, at least for several of the main authors, is supposed to be disturbing and not simply exciting, which is key to a lot of the philosophical discussions it generates.

This post from ten years ago fucking nails it and is very different from a lot of modern discussions that view cyberpunk as casual entertainment and aesthetic.

  • CriticalOtaku [he/him]
    ·
    1 month ago

    Edit: I just realized another point to that last bit, that when Cyberpunk as a genre was forming all the mixing in of Japanese aesthetics and language was meant to be alienating and reflected/played off American fears of Japanese tech industry surpassing American industry, whereas now it's like just more comfy/pretty aesthetics for generations that have grown up consuming anime.

    I mean, a lot of the visual identity of modern cyberpunk has been heavily influenced by anime (Akira, GiTS).

    It's sorta come full circle as a visual shorthand for the kind of cultural flattening effect neoliberalism has, although I'd wish they'd kinda move past some of the orientalist connotations into something more interesting.

    • KobaCumTribute [she/her]
      ·
      1 month ago

      I just realized it was kind of ironic that an aesthetic choice that in western cyberpunk was originally meant to be jarring and alien, playing off jingoism and orientalism, is now just part of the way cyberpunk aesthetics are just sort of comfy and pretty and nostalgic for modern audiences. The genre's gone from being harsh and transgressive and edgy to just escapist comfort food, and the way Japanese cultural exports have gone from "scary foreign thing that mainstream American adults cry and piss themselves over seeing" to "normal and established thing that even weirdo racist chuds embrace (for gross and bad reasons, but still)" is one particularly stark example of that.

      Like I remember South Park doing "anime is an insidious foreign plot to establish a fifth column of sleeper agents and enable a Japanese attack against America" as a plot in its trademark "irony is when you just do the bad thing unironically and if anyone calls you out you call them a slur for caring about anything" style, and at the time that was only a slightly exaggerated version of mainstream American jingoism and cynicism towards cultural imports from a country that wasn't Anglo. And that was in the late 90s/early 2000s, while cyberpunk came about when "owning Japanese electronics is a hairsbreadth from literal treason against America" was mainstream in the chud zeitgeist. Now the orientalist elements of cyberpunk just scan as something familiar and even nostalgic for audiences who've grown up seeing these things in a lot of the media they consume.

      • Frank [he/him, he/him]
        hexagon
        ·
        1 month ago

        Oh god, wasn't there a whole episode where the whole plot was that Japan was taking over the US, but whenever anyone called them on it the Japanese guys would lliterally just whip it out and say "Oh yeah, we have small penises, but American's have big penises" and then the characters would forget why they were upset? God that show is gross. And I think they were malding about Pokemon, too, but I haven't watched any southpark in probably 20 years.

    • Frank [he/him, he/him]
      hexagon
      ·
      1 month ago

      all the mixing in of Japanese aesthetics and language was meant to be alienating

      Yeah, I never saw it like that. Idk if I was just a naive kid, but I saw the Chinese, Japanese, German, traveling all over the world to assemble your team, picking up hardware in Chiba City then overnighting to Zurich to pick up the stolen software you're going to run with it, was meant to reflect that the old world of hard national borders and static cultures was breaking down and what was coming was a world where the boundaries between peoples and places was coming unfixed. Like yeah, the Orientalism and the fear that Japan was conquering the world with VCRs was there, but the way I remember is was that the companies being Japanese wasn't because Japan was a problem, but rather a way to make the corporations seem more remote, more alien. Your company wasn't the town factory or the firm that had occupied the same building since the stone age, it was now a faceless multinational with headquarters in a city your 80s education never mentioned. Japan was the face of that because that was the zeitgeist of the time, but the point was that the economy was being alienated from any particular place, that businesses and capitalists have no nation. Also, Japan in the 80s, at least the cool parts of the big cities, was legit cool as fuck. NYC was a miserable dirty sad place. Time Square was mostly cheap porn shops. There weren't many "Cool" American cities. If you're looking out your window at choking LA smog or urban decay in Cincinnati, then looking at a magazine and seeing clean streets, bright neon lights, and kids with cool innovative fashion in Tokyo, while all the old white people on the news are wringing their hands abut being overrun by cheap Japanese electronics, It seems like a natural place for a writer to set "The Future". Staid, reactionary, piggishly anti-intellectual America wasn't going to be part of that future. You can see that in The Sprawl stories - All the cool shit happens somewhere else. In the US there's just the sprawl, a vast, decayed urban expanse covering the US east coast that just spreads despondency.

      Does that track? Am I just nostalgic about it and not remember the overt racism? that happens to me a lot, I was oblivious to a lot of the racism around me as a kid and just didn't notice it among other themes. going back and reading a lot of old favorites has been legit shocking.

      • CriticalOtaku [he/him]
        ·
        1 month ago

        It's not overt racism that's the problem (in fact, I would say Gibson as a author is someone who is very careful to avoid racist caricature in his work, unlike say Neal Stephenson); rather, the orientalism comes from who is being written about, and who is left out. Like, this blog post puts it really succinctly:

        But in a setting that draws so heavily on East Asian culture, why are all the characters white?

        Here's a polygon article that'll do the topic more justice than I ever could, but to summarize the crux of the problem: that picture of "The Future" that's "Cool Japan"... that was never real in the first place. That's the tourist brochure version- reality is that the other side of the world's covered in The Sprawl too.

        And it's hard to really blame Gibson- as far as he was concerned he's just writing some silly sci-fi story, he didn't ask to define an entire sub-genre- but the fact of the matter is that without really doing the necessary research to accurately portray things from the perspectives of those he's accidentally othering with his aesthetics, he just left the doors open for a kinda "Yellow Peril 2.0" to remain embedded within.

        • Frank [he/him, he/him]
          hexagon
          ·
          edit-2
          1 month ago

          Alright, I'll give those a read, thank you.

          You know there was this book, Moxieland, back sometime in the 00s, and it really nailed the key questions of cyberpunk. But it brought them forward, dealt with contemporary issues. a big theme was that your phone was your wallet, your ID cards, your legal right to exist, and without it you couldn't open the door to your apartment, buy food, get on the bus, anything. So if the cops and corps shut your phone down you were fucked, you could go begging to them to turn you back on and you'll do anything they ask, or you can starve to death.

          But it moved the setting to Joburg, it dealt with contemporary race issues in South Africa (idk if it did a good job or not), I don't recall their being any yakuza or katanas. It grew up.