12-02-2014, 05:21 PM
(12-01-2014, 07:56 AM)stevebowers Wrote: "The magnificent epic of an ambiguous utopia." This was true of the Dispossessed, and true of the (often uncomfortable and challenging) Culture; I would like to think that it is true of OA as well. The Terragen Sphere is a comfortable place to exist in, but a nightmare for anyone who wants to live in a world without gods.
I think we have the advantage over Banks' "Culture" in that since there are multiple authors we have a more diverse set of conceptions of 'The Good' than Banks did. I agree with the author of the piece that Banks' conception of an ideal culture is a bit disturbing and contradictory once you dig into it. We, with our multiple viewpoints, have more different ways to entice, and (again, if you look inside our supposed paradises more ways to disturb) the reader.
One similarity I do note is that we, like Banks, are still children of Western culture and of the 'Enlightenment'. The OA setting's 'Civilized Galaxy' is actually the projection of a fairly narrow set of human values out into the larger universe. Western colonialism on a galactic scale, some might argue. :-) Fortunately for plausibility's sake we do admit that there might be other , equally powerful, metacultures at work outside the 'Sephirotics'.
Stephen