Iain Banks Culture Series Galaxy | Worlds of Speculative Fiction (lecture 18)

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 15 окт 2024
  • Enroll in the FREE online class, Worlds of Speculative Fiction - reasonio.teach...
    and get access to handouts, lesson pages, other resources - and stay informed about the ongoing series!
    This is the eighteenth session in a new series of monthly lectures and discussions, featuring Dr. Gregory Sadler, and hosted by the Brookfield Public Library. The series focuses on philosophical themes in the works and world of selected classic and contemporary fantasy, science fiction, horror, and other speculative fiction genre authors.
    We continue the series by focusing in this session on the classic science fiction author Iain Banks, and his Culture series of novels
    You can get the books we are discussing at the links below:
    Consider Phlebas - amzn.to/2D23kTI
    Player of Games - amzn.to/2r4xjsC
    Use of Weapons - amzn.to/2D3f4Fk
    Authors we have covered in the series so far are J.R..R. Tolkein, A.E. Van Vogt, C.S. Lewis, Isaac Asimov, Frank Herbert, Roger Zelazny, Ursula K. Leguin, Michael Moorcock, Philip K. Dick, Mervyn Peake, George R.R. Martin, Philip Jose Farmer, Madeline L'Engle, Douglas Adams, Anne McCaffrey, Orson Scott Card, Iain Banks, H.P. Lovecraft, William Gibson, C.L. Moore, Octavia Butler, Jorge Luis Borges, Fritz Leiber, Robert Heinlein, L. Sprague de Camp, Andre Norton, Arthur Clarke, Robert Howard, Gene Wolfe, C. J. Cherryh, Jack Vance, Edgar Allan Poe, G.K. Chesterton, Lewis Carroll, Tanith Lee, Gordon Dickson, August Derleth, Karl Edward Wagner, Aldous Huxley, Bram Stoker, Mary Shelley, China Mieville, Walter Miller, Cordwainer Smith, Liu Cixin, R. Scott Bakker, Stanislaw Lem, Neal Stephenson's, Philip Pullman, Olaf Stapledon, Veronica Roth, J.G. Ballard, Dan Simmons, Andrzej Sapkowski, Kim Stanley Robinson, N. K. Jemisin, Terry Pratchett, and Steven Erickson
    If you'd like to support my work producing videos like this, become a Patreon supporter! Here's the link to find out more - including the rewards I offer backers: / sadler
    You can also make a direct contribution to help fund my ongoing educational projects, by clicking here: www.paypal.me/...
    If you're interested in philosophy tutorial sessions with me click here: reasonio.wordp...
    My videos are used by students, lifelong learners, other professors, and professionals to learn more about topics, texts, and thinkers in philosophy, religious studies, literature, social-political theory, critical thinking, and communications. These include college and university classes, British A-levels preparation, and Indian civil service (IAS) examination preparation
    (Amazon links are associate links. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases)
    #Philosophy #Worldbuilding #SpeculativeFiction #Literature #Analysis #Books #Culture #IanBanks #ScienceFiction #Humanity

Комментарии • 46

  • @euanmcaleece402
    @euanmcaleece402 3 года назад +7

    Artisan work, playing of games, physical achievement, even art has meaning in the culture

    • @SMacCuUladh
      @SMacCuUladh 2 года назад

      art has meaning in every culture that has art.

  • @Second247
    @Second247 7 лет назад +9

    Great discussion! i've read one book from Culture and it was certainly one of most enjoyable Scifi book i've read and one of the few which has offered me plenty to think about humanity, future and technology. And based on your discussion i don't seem to be only one.

    • @GregoryBSadler
      @GregoryBSadler  7 лет назад +1

      Yes, it turned out to be some really excellent reading!

  • @brianmonks8657
    @brianmonks8657 6 лет назад +11

    I think that Banks was not talking about liberal vs conservative ideology when he said that US sci-fi was too conservative. I think he was talking about being too conservative in imagining future political structure, economics, etc. Look at Star Wars, there was an emperor, money, etc. Everything is too familiar to us now. How different would every thing be with very high tech, the available resources of countless star systems, etc.?
    That's why the Culture is so different than the old sci-fi where everything is similar today, just with space ships, ray guns and aliens added.
    The other thing is the discussion about A.I. in the Culture. My impression is that the A.I.s originally were human personalities uploaded (like the A.I.s the Gzilt had in the Hydrogen Sonata), not independently designed or spontaneously created. New A.I. personalities are created in the culture, but by mixing traits from the human uploads, and some randomness so that they can be unique individuals. This is why the Minds in the culture act so human, with a wide range of human emotions. Minds can be kind, cruel, helpful, or any very human personality.

    • @GregoryBSadler
      @GregoryBSadler  6 лет назад +3

      I'm pretty sure he did mean the political/cultural sense of "conservative", having done the background research. Moorcock says similar stuff earlier on. . .
      No reason why there can't be multiple senses of the term in play, though.

    • @sonoftakeshisan5929
      @sonoftakeshisan5929 4 года назад +2

      Traditionally in Scotland we are conservative ( small c) while simultaneously having socialist values of community. That we created the Labour/Unionist movement which went on to forge the National Health Service and welfare state. The character of Judge Dredd was also created in Scotland at the same time. Scotland discovers oil and gas yet the Conservative Party made sure Scotland saw no immediate benefit. Shipyards that once created the ships that would traverse the known universe of the British Empire were closed. Coal mines were being run down. New semi conductor industries most notably IBM came to Greenock at the same time. All this can be seen in his narratives.

    • @davidwilson6577
      @davidwilson6577 3 года назад +2

      Iain Banks was politically and socially very liberal, and the society at the focus of his long running sci-fi series was more politically and socially liberal than the Star Trek federation. But the stories always questioned whether this was ideal, if there is an ideal philosophy etc. He did a great job of allowing anyone of any political persuasion to absorb the points he was making without being preachy or definitive.

    • @davidwilson6577
      @davidwilson6577 3 года назад +1

      I should say 'M' Banks, I've only read Espedair Street and Transition from his 'just Iain Banks' books, and I hear Wasp Factory is more political.

    • @Low_commotion
      @Low_commotion 3 года назад

      @@davidwilson6577 To use the 4-quadrant political compass, both Banks & the Culture embodied left-libertarianism. This is not to say he was pro-capitalist, since "libertarian" isn't used the way we typically think of the word. Rather, one consistent theme of the Culture is that it maximizes individual choice & minimizes control from authority (both public or private). Given that it was also socially transgressive for its time & even today, that lands it squarely in the bottom-left section of the political compass.

  • @Daoland-Everywhere
    @Daoland-Everywhere 3 года назад +1

    I very much like this series and the discussion. I am trying to create a storyline around wilderness as a civilization and humanity seeing only its own exeptionalism and nature as something to conquer, which in Bank's culture series seem to have been completed. But in the context of the discussion on altruism, a Tibetan Lama friend suggested that to be fully selfish, there are so many details to be taken into consideration that selfishness and altruism eventually are indistinguishable. It sometimes seems to me that Banks projects something like this in the culture.

  • @eliglor9863
    @eliglor9863 3 года назад +2

    Any recommendation on which book to start reading the Culture series? I've heard you can sorta start anywhere in the series.

    • @GregoryBSadler
      @GregoryBSadler  3 года назад +3

      Then why not start at the start?

    • @eliglor9863
      @eliglor9863 3 года назад

      I'll take that and dive in head first! The only friend I have who tried reading the Culture series said they hated Consider Phlebas. But they were rather vauge as to why, the term "ghastly" was used alot when I asked about it. But then again, I'm a R. Scott Bakker fan. Just discovered your channel from the Prince of Nothing videos you have going. Cheers!

    • @shocka144
      @shocka144 3 года назад

      @@eliglor9863 Sometimes you don't realise how good something is until you reach the end, then when looking back you realise. A re-read then happens :)

    • @scottgray4534
      @scottgray4534 3 года назад

      Check RUclips for that some good arguments for reading it different ways are out there so find which way want to match you. What order should I read the culture series should bring some for you to choose from.

    • @blindstagehand
      @blindstagehand 2 года назад

      Start with The State of The Art, which is a series of short stories and a novella which takes up half the book which is The State of The Art ~ it's an excellent story of aliens visiting Earth with a nice twist because they do end up eating us! My favourite M Banks book is not culture though, it's called The Algerbraist and it's excellent.

  • @danielrafferty4108
    @danielrafferty4108 2 года назад +1

    Hope you got the chance to read The Wasp Factory Gregory. It is indeed quite a ride.

    • @GregoryBSadler
      @GregoryBSadler  2 года назад +2

      Not yet.

    • @SMacCuUladh
      @SMacCuUladh 2 года назад

      walking on glass is better than his first novel, the wasp factory.

    • @johnhicks5059
      @johnhicks5059 Год назад

      @@SMacCuUladh hmmm ... but they are completely different. twf is about gender ... wog is about the dream state of humans and identification

    • @SMacCuUladh
      @SMacCuUladh Год назад

      @@johnhicks5059 the wasp factory isn't about gender ffs have you actually read the book?

    • @johnhicks5059
      @johnhicks5059 Год назад

      @@SMacCuUladh really not ? c'mon ! it is totally
      ... turns out the narrator was born a girl
      did you not pick that up ?

  • @alexmeyer7986
    @alexmeyer7986 7 лет назад +1

    Hi Dr. Sadler, is a discussion of Hyperion planned? If not, I would love for you to consider it. Thank you, and as always, great video.

    • @GregoryBSadler
      @GregoryBSadler  7 лет назад

      I do my planning for the next year towards the end of the present year - if the series is renewed

    • @GregoryBSadler
      @GregoryBSadler  7 лет назад

      I do my planning for the next year towards the end of the present year - if the series is renewed

    • @cerbing666
      @cerbing666 6 лет назад

      My though exactly.

    • @SIVA6619
      @SIVA6619 4 года назад

      @@GregoryBSadler I know its late now.. but Hyperion would still be very interesting !

    • @GregoryBSadler
      @GregoryBSadler  4 года назад

      TheMylesky Yes, very late

  • @blindstagehand
    @blindstagehand 2 года назад +1

    Iain Banks writes regular fiction, Iain M Banks writes si-fi ~ they are the same person, but if you're talking about the Culture series, stricly speaking, you are talking about Iain M Banks... :!

  • @semianonymousraccoon2950
    @semianonymousraccoon2950 Год назад

    The description of Heinlein as left-wing struck me as odd, but then I realized he was left-wing as a younger man and became a radical right-wing libertarian in his later years. It's actually understandable, as he ate government food when younger but later made enough money that he had to actually pay taxes and became a bit... stingy about extending that same help to others.

  • @euanmcaleece402
    @euanmcaleece402 3 года назад

    Nice work. SC 12843

  • @PurpleWarlock
    @PurpleWarlock 5 лет назад

    Dr. Sadler, sorry to pester but could you check out an old British spy TV show: The Sandbaggers? Some episodes are on youtube (guessing in not very legal ways).
    ruclips.net/video/lKg_t-Prhqk/видео.html
    First episode is excellent. It's about how MI-6 got the task of helping Norway's secret service rescue agents in Soviet Territory for an economic favor.

  • @johnhicks5059
    @johnhicks5059 Год назад +1

    the wasp factory is perfect reading for the non binary age