| Why,
Robot? Scots author Ken Macleod on why the idea of a tool,
a machine, that replicates our most distinctive features - a machine with a face,
a voice, a mind, a hand - is disturbing and uncanny. Why Robots?
Robots,
an interactive exhibition sponsored by, among others, Heriot Watt
University, is running at Callendar House in Falkirk until September
5. When I was asked to give a talk about robots in SF as part of
the associated evening lecture series I said, 'I don't know much
about robots in SF.' That's all right, I was told, you must know
more about it than most people.

So,
some weeks and a hasty shufti into The Encyclopaedia of Science Fiction later,
I was given a lift to Callendar House by Heriot-Watt's efficient publicity person,
Frances Williams. The exhibition includes an Electrolux Trilobite vacuum-cleaner
(sadly showing an empty battery symbol at the time), an astonishing animated sculpture
from Glasgow, an interactive remote control for a robot arm in the University's
laboratories, and a lot of toys and posters. The venue is an attractive place
in its own right, and the exhibition is well worth a visit. Why are we
interested in robots? Our ancestors were predators and prey. This makes
us pattern-recognising animals, and jumpy animals. The patterns we are best equipped
to recognise are those distinctive of other animals, and especially other humans.
We see faces in fires, in clouds, in leaves. Sigmund Freud said that the uncanny
is the experience of being uncertain whether something is alive or not. And from
our own - often early - experiences of wondering whether the scratching at the
window is of twigs or fingers, or the shape in the corner or behind the door is
a figure or a dressing-gown, we see how he was right. We are also tool-making
animals, with an opposable thumb and a flexible hand unique in the animal kingdom.
So the idea of a tool, a machine, that replicates our most distinctive
features - a machine with a face, a voice, a mind, a hand - is disturbing and
uncanny. In the exhibition you can see many toy robots, and you can see how much
design effort goes into making them less frightening, indeed cute, for young children,
and more frightening for older children. The robot in SF has a dual ancestry.
One forebear is the monster in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein. Another is the real
practice of building automata, described in Tom Stanage's The Mechanical Turk.
The Frankenstein motif of a creation that destroys its creators appeared in Karel
Capek's R.U.R. and rampaged through early SF, along with more nuanced presentations.
An unambiguously sympathetic portrayal arrived with Eano Binder's I, Robot
and was carried forward in Asimov's stories collected under the same title. Asimov,
you might say, wrote the book on robots, though other stories - Anthony Boucher's
brilliant Thomist fable 'The Quest For St Aquin' and Brian Aldiss's hilarious
and elegaic 'But Who Can Replace a Man?' - stand out, as do Philip K. Dick's android
dreams and nightmares. From the 1950s to the 1970s, robots carried a heavy
weight of themes - humanity, identity, labour, slavery - on uncomplaining metal
shoulders. And then they went away. They became, as I recall Paul MacAuley
saying on a panel at Trincon 2, dead tech, like food pills and psi powers and
tractor beams. They died and went to heaven - into satire and skiffy, in Red Dwarf
and Star Wars, and into cyberspace, where their dematerialised descendants haunt
our imaginations as the AI. But the AI is another story, and another talk.
Ken Macleod (c) Ken Macleod 2004
| |
OTHER CONTENT - August 2004
Elizabeth
Hand Interview Sasha talks to SFF writer Elizabeth Hand
about the art of developing characters, drawing on real events and people, and
why it now takes Elizabeth at least two years to write a book. (AUTHOR INTERVIEWS) The
Dead Lines of Greg Bear Author Greg Bear on his new novel,
turning to horror after success as a science fiction writer, and Greg's in-production
SF work about law enforcement on an international scale (AUTHOR INTERVIEWS) Marianne
de Pierres Interview The author of Nylon Angel on the
dark futures of cyberpunk, cutting her teeth on A.C. Clarke, media manipulation,
and how studying Film and TV as an undergraduate has influenced her science fiction
writing. (AUTHOR INTERVIEWS) Why,
Robot? Scots author Ken Macleod on why the idea of a
tool, a machine, that replicates our most distinctive features - a machine with
a face, a voice, a mind, a hand - is disturbing and uncanny. (COMMENT) Stones Short
story from Radi Todorov Radev, a 26-year old science fiction author from Bulgaria.
As well as his fiction, Radi usually writes the Bulgarian SF news reports for
Locus. (FICTION) Offworld
Report: Science Fiction and Fantasy: August 2004 Interviews
with Alan Moore, Geoffrey Landis, Steve Erikson and Robert Silverberg, why elitism
in the genre is good, and Kim Stanley Robinson on the really dumb science of The
Day After Tomorrow. (NEWS) Offworld
Report: Weird Science: August 2004 Inflatable space stations,
why we never went to the moon, the Project Icarus study on deflecting asteroids
with very large atomics, Stephen Hawking on black holes, Cassini orbits Saturn,
'and Beagle 3' looks for an American ride. (NEWS) Fantasy
Filmfest 2004 Sasha tells how starting out in Munich,
and cutting a creepy swathe through Stuttgart, Cologne and Frankfurt, to a final
week-long blowout in Berlin, the Fantasy Filmfest dishes everything from haute
horreur to gore-n-splatter. (CON REPORTS) I,
Robot - Mark's Take In 2035 there is a murder at U.S.
Robotics and a robophobic policeman, played by Will Smith, believes robots are
responsible. Mixing animation and live action nearly seamlessly, I, Robot turns
Isaac Asimov's robot world into the backdrop for a prosaic summer action film.
It is not a film Asimov would have enjoyed much. (FILM REVIEWS) Spider-Man
2 - Frank's Take In director Sam Raimi’s explosively
action-packed superhero saga Spider-Man 2, he picks up the pleasurable pace of
the web-slinging wizard. Tobey Maguire is back in full form as the angst-ridden
crime-fighting cobwebbed crawler. Lost in a perpetual haze of conflict and courageousness,
Maguire’s Peter Parker/Spider-Man is a harried hero with a tainted blue-collar
badge that he proudly dons. (FILM REVIEWS) The
Chronicles of Riddick - Frank's Take Four years after
Pitch Black, filmmaker David Twohy decides to follow up his celebrated pet project
with the disjointed and bloated sequel The Chronicles of Riddick. Utterly ponderous
and as clunky as a crater rock, Riddick fails to capture the spontaneous spirit
of its predecessor. (FILM REVIEWS) The
Stepford Wives - Frank's Take The writing is on the wall
when a casual comedy that boasts a high-powered cast doesn’t have a single clue
as to what it wants to accomplish. And that’s certainly not a vote of confidence
for a dark SF movie looking to make mincemeat commentary about the awakening of
feminism and the imprisoned role of domicile divas looking to grow beyond their
restricted boundaries. (FILM REVIEWS) Around
the World in 80 Days - Frank's Take Poor Jules Verne
must be spinning in his grave. Out of all the remakes that had been done regarding
Verne’s whimsical classical story, director Frank 'The Wedding Singer' Coraci
delivers a botched and banal affair of lackluster lunacy in his updated version
of Around the World in 80 Days. (FILM REVIEWS)
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