From rec.arts.sf.reviews Tue Oct 10 11:12:05 1995 Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf.reviews Path: news.ifm.liu.se!liuida!sunic!sunic.sunet.se!news00.sunet.se!sunic!news.sprintlink.net!cs.utexas.edu!swrinde!sgigate.sgi.com!uhog.mit.edu!news!nobody From: jim.henry@lightspeed.com (JIM HENRY) Subject: _Erewhon_, Samuel Butler Message-ID: <8B27561.00040318A2.uuout@lightspeed.com> Followup-To: rec.arts.sf.written Keywords: author= JIM HENRY Sender: news@media.mit.edu (USENET News System) Reply-To: jim.henry@lightspeed.com (JIM HENRY) Organization: Faster-Than-Light, Atlanta GA USA, +1 404 292 8761 Date: Fri, 6 Oct 1995 04:23:08 GMT Approved: wex@media.mit.edu (Alan Wexelblat) Lines: 44 _Erewhon_ by Samuel Butler has been described as a utopian novel, but to call it a utopia or dystopia is an oversimplification. It is a novel of ideas about a society that is in some respects better than 19th century England, in some respects worse; Butler now satirizes an institution, now proposes a reform, and now plays with ideas for their own sake. The story leaves a bit to be desired; that is to say, the exposition of ideas is not always so well integrated into the story as it might be. It is nonetheless worth reading for that. I will sketch here a few of the odd, thought-provoking ideas that Butler tosses up in the course of the story. The Erewhonians consider natural disease to be morally reprehensible, and punish it following investigation and trial by imprisonment and hard labor. (There is an unpopular reform movement which proposes doing away with hard labor and making it a simple quarantine.) For what most societies consider moral crimes, however, they consult the services of "straighteners," who are supposed to heal such ailments by prescription of various sorts of penance. They do not believe in a life after death, but they tell of a world of the unborn, from which suicides emigrate to our world by pestering men and women until they beget a child. Their Colleges of Unreason train young men in inconsistency and compromise, and teach them not to slavishly follow ideas to their logical, absurd conclusions. Some centuries ago there was a debate about machines, which were at that time much more advanced than those of 19th century Europe. Some argued that at their present rate of improvement machines would someday surpass humans, and would replace or subjugate them. Others argued that machines were simply extensions of human powers and senses, and that the improvement of machines was an indirect improvement of humans. I have not even mentioned the singing statues, the musical banks, the funeral monuments, the worship of Ydgrun, the debate over the rights of animals and vegetables, or the Hospital of Incurable Bores. This is not only an important book in the history of science fiction, it is great fun for anyone who enjoys playing with ideas. %T Erewhon, or, Over the Range %A Butler, Samuel %D 1872 (many later reprints) %K science fiction social satire machine evolution disease crime