AI and cyberpunk networks

McFarlane, A. (2020) AI and cyberpunk networks. In: Cave, S., Dihal, K. and Dillon, S. (eds.) AI Narratives: a History of Imaginative Thinking About Intelligent Machines. Oxford University Press: Oxford, pp. 284-308. ISBN 9780198846666 (doi: 10.1093/oso/9780198846666.003.0013)

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Abstract

Cyberpunk science fiction broke new ground in terms of AI representation; William Gibson’s Neuromancer (1984), the ur-text of cyberpunk, introduced the term ‘cyberspace’, and this spatialized metaphor for data creates an environment that can be inhabited by AIs, rather than an idea of the AI being located in one ‘body’, or in one static place. This chapter explores the possibilities opened by this innovation and by cyberpunk’s continued interrogation of AI as a phenomenon that is dispersed throughout networks, particularly focusing on William Gibson, in the Afrofuturist movement through a reading of Samuel R. Delany’s Stars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand (1984), and on the work of writers who have been characterized as ‘post-cyberpunk’, such as Cory Doctorow, who shows how algorithms and artificial intelligences can have unexpected, international, and economic consequences.

Item Type:Book Sections
Status:Published
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Mcfarlane, Dr Anna
Authors: McFarlane, A.
Subjects:P Language and Literature > PN Literature (General)
P Language and Literature > PS American literature
T Technology > T Technology (General)
College/School:College of Arts & Humanities > School of Critical Studies > English Literature
Publisher:Oxford University Press
ISBN:9780198846666
Published Online:21 February 2020

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