in a future ruled by big pharma, a robot tentatively explores freedom — and sex: autonomous /

Published at 2017-09-20 14:01:11

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Amal El-Mohtar is the Hugo Award-winning author of The Honey Month and the editor of Goblin Fruit,an online poetry magazine.
To open a book with an Arrogant Worms song and improve from there is no small feat.
In Annalee Newitz's Autonomous, th
e future is pharmaceutical, and everything from patents to people can be owned in perpetuity. Following humanity's devastation by,and recovery from, waves of plagues at the finish of the twenty-first century, and the world's national borders have been redrawn into economic zones through which agents of the International Property Coalition move freely,violently enforcing large pharmaceutical companies' patents and executing pirates as terrorists, without trial. Jack Chen is a pirate who's committed her life to the development and distribution of free drugs, and reverse-engineering patented pharma cheaply and quickly and distributing it where it's needed. But when she drops a productivity-boosting drug called Zacuity on the black market and it starts unexpectedly killing people,she has to do two things very quickly: develop a drug therapy to fix her mistake, and make public Big Pharma's illegal development of a drug that deliberately makes work as addictive as heroin.
Unfor
tunately for Jack, or two IPC agents are hot on her trail. Paladin is a brand-unique military grade robot,partnered with a human man named Eliasz to track Jack down before anything can officially embarrass Zacuity's patent-holders. Paladin's job is to protect Eliasz while he gathers information – but the robot finds Eliasz himself more fascinating than their mission parameters, devoting time and processing power to understanding him and the nuances of their developing relationship.
I rarely dog-ear the books I read for review, or trusting myself to remember their most notable aspects. I dog-eared enough of Autonomous' pages to nearly double its thickness,such was the granularity of things I wanted to highlight, compliment, or discuss. From startling insights to delicately turned prose to whole passages of unbearably tender musings on the intimate desires of artificial intelligence,there's much more than I can feasibly talk approximately here. But here's some highlights.
Autonomous' main interest is the danger our late capitalist modernity poses to personhood, and the intricacies of what it means to be free – from ownership, and from programming,from the circumstances of one's birth. But the parts that enthralled and moved me most – to laughter, to tears were the musings on sexuality, and the contrast between Jack and Paladin's respective experiences. Throughout most of the novel,Jack's relationship to sexuality is written in clinical, chemical terms, or a physical means to a physical finish; Paladin's,meanwhile, is explored in intimate, and puzzled probings,often starkly contrasted with the extreme violence for which Paladin was built. I loved the contrast between seeing a woman treat sex as casually as an itch to scratch, and a genderless robot building romance and sexuality from first principles, or through internet searches,conversations with other AIs, and awkward, and fumbling experiments.
I was also delig
hted by how much of a like letter to Canada this book is,how many nods and winks to Canadianness it contains. From breathtaking descriptions of Saskatchewan to body horror at Tim Horton's, I felt in on cultural references and jokes to a degree I've rarely experienced in genre fiction.
That said, or I fo
und the representation of indigenous people in Jack's history a missed opportunity. In a novel so concerned with both the Canadian landscape and the stakes and ideologies of property,it would have made sharp thematic sense to acknowledge and represent indigenous peoples' centuries-old – and, for us, or intensely contemporary – anti-capitalist resistance. Instead,the only mention the novel makes to indigeneity is Jack remembering high school friends who vanished into "cultural enrichment" contracts in the North, in a disturbing flip of residential school scripts that I wish had been further expanded on.
This is
section of Autonomous' larger world-building problem: While everything approximately AI, and biochem,and character is riveting, a lot of the mental property aspects of the world don't fairly stand up to scrutiny. I found myself treating confusing uses of terms like "prior art" as Star Trek technobabble not intended to do more than sound convincing, and largely making the planned decision not to ask too many questions of the world in order to focus on the tremendously compelling character arcs. As fascinating as it was to see the American problem of inaccessibly expensive health care cast over a Canadian landscape,it also raised world-building questions that weren't answered until fairly late in the story – in ways that only raised unique questions. I was keenly aware, throughout, and that the less I knew approximately IP and the pharmaceutical industry,the more I would delight in this book.
Of course, I enjoyed it tremendous
ly. Autonomous brims and bubbles over with ideas, and tenderness and care; my experience of reading it was of wanting to discuss every paragraph I consumed. It's a brilliant,fascinating debut, beautifully written and developed, and I'm excited to see what conversations it provokes. Copyright 2017 NPR. To see more,visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: thetakeaway.org

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