Surveying the debates around William Gibson’s Neuromancer (1984) almost forty years since the moment of cyberpunk, this essay proposes a new reading of Gibson’s fiction, and treatments of Tokyo in post-cyberpunk SF more generally. Drawing on, and critiquing, insights from Marxism and Asian/American studies, this essay locates in Gibson’s representations of Tokyo a neoliberal ambience. Gibson’s novels, with their fascination for commodities, gadgets, and the consumer details of consumerism, create in Tokyo an image of a potential American future, but this is a vision undercut intermittently by their anxieties around the status of the American presence in Tokyo, and of its reminders of a history of occupation. This argument is developed, fina...
While cyberpunk is often described as a dystopian genre, the paper argues that it should be seen rat...
While cyberpunk is often described as a dystopian genre, the paper argues that it should be seen rat...
Talking about space in speculative fiction (i.e. fantasy, science fiction or supernatural fiction) t...
This paper attempts to meditate upon the transpacific imagination of cyberpunk by reconstructing its...
Taking the works of William Gibson as its point of focus, this thesis considers cyberpunk’s expansio...
As Cyberpunk science fiction grew in prominence and popularity in the late 80's, prominent critics b...
North-American cyberpunk’s recurrent use of high-tech Japan as “the default setting for ...
North-American cyberpunk’s recurrent use of high-tech Japan as “the default setting for ...
I apply enchantment theory to William Gibson's Neuromancer and several works by the Japanese SF auth...
The works of William Gibson, one of the most prominent writers of the cyberpunk subgenre, show how t...
In 1988 Akira hit theaters in Japan and kicked off a ‘cyberpunk’ trend in anime films and television...
'Cyberspace. A consensual hallucination experienced daily by billions … Lines of light ranged i...
This paper attempts a cybercritical reading of William Gibson’s novel Neuromancer (1984) to explore ...
This book traces developments in cyberpunk culture through a close engagement with the novels of the...
In William Gibson’s post-cyberpunk Interstitial trilogy – 'Virtual Light' (1993), 'Idoru' (1996) and...
While cyberpunk is often described as a dystopian genre, the paper argues that it should be seen rat...
While cyberpunk is often described as a dystopian genre, the paper argues that it should be seen rat...
Talking about space in speculative fiction (i.e. fantasy, science fiction or supernatural fiction) t...
This paper attempts to meditate upon the transpacific imagination of cyberpunk by reconstructing its...
Taking the works of William Gibson as its point of focus, this thesis considers cyberpunk’s expansio...
As Cyberpunk science fiction grew in prominence and popularity in the late 80's, prominent critics b...
North-American cyberpunk’s recurrent use of high-tech Japan as “the default setting for ...
North-American cyberpunk’s recurrent use of high-tech Japan as “the default setting for ...
I apply enchantment theory to William Gibson's Neuromancer and several works by the Japanese SF auth...
The works of William Gibson, one of the most prominent writers of the cyberpunk subgenre, show how t...
In 1988 Akira hit theaters in Japan and kicked off a ‘cyberpunk’ trend in anime films and television...
'Cyberspace. A consensual hallucination experienced daily by billions … Lines of light ranged i...
This paper attempts a cybercritical reading of William Gibson’s novel Neuromancer (1984) to explore ...
This book traces developments in cyberpunk culture through a close engagement with the novels of the...
In William Gibson’s post-cyberpunk Interstitial trilogy – 'Virtual Light' (1993), 'Idoru' (1996) and...
While cyberpunk is often described as a dystopian genre, the paper argues that it should be seen rat...
While cyberpunk is often described as a dystopian genre, the paper argues that it should be seen rat...
Talking about space in speculative fiction (i.e. fantasy, science fiction or supernatural fiction) t...