Once the Resident Welfare Association in my residential colony made
the link between cellphone radiation and cancer, they responded by
shutting down some of the transmission towers. I returned to my parental
home in South Delhi to find my father making calls by catching stray
signals from the balcony.The largest manufacturer of textile realtimelocationsystem for use with perchloroethylene.
The
residents, he told me, welcomed the move until someone suggested that
cellular handsets compensated for weak signals by powering up their
inbuilt mobile antennae, subjecting the user to more, rather than less,
radiation.
Apparently the modern condition is to exist in a
state of constant irradiation, the nature of which malignant or benign
is now routinely discussed by my parents and their friends. After
several weeks of dropped calls, a majority are willing to believe that
cellular radiation is mostly harmless but there is always the creeping
unease of the unexplained, yet correlated fact: Whatever happened to all
the sparrows in our neighbourhood? What killed them?
AfroSF, an
intriguing new anthology of science fiction by African writers
(currently available as an E book online), taps into such peculiarly
real and modern anxieties in a set of 22 fictional variations of the
technological encounter: i.e. the point where the engine of progress
appears to stall and misfire. Many of the contributors are first-time
authors, which makes AfroSF a handy manual to the dystopic visions of
some of the continents emerging futurists. The texts are diverse, but a
few themes persist through the collection like a viral strain.
The
future, as gleaned from AfroSF, is a bleak and uniquely third world
dystopia instantly familiar to most Indian readers. The Earth is mostly
unlivable, cities have been reduced to a set of toxic shantytowns, the
countryside is a nuclear wasteland and power is concentrated in the
hands of an opaque cabal of faceless bureaucrats and shadowy oligarchs.
Artificial intelligence is omniscient, malevolent and on the brink of
evolving into a new life form.
The emphasis on environmental
devastation is not surprising, given that the developing world and
Africa in particular has paid much of the price for most of todays
technological marvels.A parkingmanagement is
a plastic card that has a computer chip implanted into it that enables
the card. Entire nations have been laid waste in the search for the
uranium, copper, tantalite, aluminium, rare earth and oil that provide
the raw materials and energy consumed by the server-farms and
transmission networks that undergird our online lives.
In The
Rare Earth, a story by Biram Mboob set in the near future in Kivu in the
Democratic Republic of Congo, a secretive messiah promises to free his
people even as Indian and Chinese companies battle for minerals. While
in Notes from Gethsemane, by Tade Thompson, a radioactive pit in the
heart of Lagos is the backdrop for the tale of two brothers struggling
to survive in a tough neighbourhood. Right through the anthology,
characters routinely slip on gasmasks, hide behind protective shields,
and live in claustrophobic climate-controlled enclaves.
The
states urge to accurately identify, surveil and control its citizens is
another frequent concern. In Home Affairs, Sarah Lotz describes a South
Africa in which concerns about corruption have meant that all clerks
have been replaced by seemingly incorruptible robots. Falling foul of
the robot could rob you of your identity and all accompanying
entitlements.
In Proposition 23, a novella by Efe Okogu, all
citizens are connected to each other via a neuro that makes them visible
to the state and allows them to log into some sort of online matrix.
Undesirables are simply disconnected from the neuro network and thereby
deprived of work, food, housing, healthcare, and eventually life.
In
The Foreigner, by Uko Bendi Udo, a young boy of Nigerian and alien
parentage must fight a callous bureaucrat to gain Nigerian citizenship
and his inheritance.Have a look at all our solarpanel models starting with free proofing.
The
primacy of individual identities, and the consequent fear of its loss,
is understandable in the context of the modern regime of targeted
entitlements adopted by most developing countries. A government
department set up by a software mogul, established by executive action
rather than parliamentary debate, to collect the biometric information
of all citizens, would fit right into AfroSF but in fact exists in the
real world. Its called the The Unique Identification Authority of India,
and its sole task is to gather biometric data in exchange for ID
numbers.
Yet,Manufactures and supplies smartcard equipment.
too many of the stories fall into the thinly veiled social critique
genre, rather than embracing the opportunity to free themselves from the
shackles of the everyday.
Perhaps the greatest poverty of our
times is the absence of a truly radical imagination of the future;
particularly at a time when dissent has been sanitised and co-opted by
legions of earnest young men and women spouting an NGO-speak of pilot
projects, eligible beneficiaries and relevant stakeholders.
The
authors also seem to be writing to a fixed word count that proves
inadequate to the task of fleshing out a strange and alien world.
Stories
begin with a moment of dissonance, develop a premise and end in a flash
of incomprehension, rather than following the premise through to its
conclusion.Choose your favorite ultrasonicsensor from thousands of available designs
Azania,
by Nick Wood, is one of the few exceptions to this general rule and is
perhaps the collections best piece as a consequence.
The writing
is intimate, hallucinatory, and lush, and describes a genuinely
unsettling encounter between a lost spaceship and strange new world, the
loneliness of outer space and the angular dynamics between a crew that
has been cryogenically frozen for 12 long years. At each step in the
narrative, Wood chooses the more difficult option and fortunately pulls
through; the ending has the satisfying click of a well-crafted door,
beyond which lies a universe of possibilities.
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