The Gernsback Continuum

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"The Gernsback Continuum"
Author William Gibson
Country Canada
Language English
Series Burning Chrome
Genre(s) Science fiction, cyberpunk short story
Published in Burning Chrome
Publication type Anthology
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Publication date 1981
Preceded by Johnny Mnemonic
Followed by Fragments of a Hologram Rose

"The Gernsback Continuum" is a short story by William Gibson about a photographer who has been given the assignment of photographing old, futuristic architecture. This architecture, although largely forgotten at the time of the story, embodied for the generation that built it their concept of the future. The titular "Gernsback" alludes to Hugo Gernsback, a pulp science fiction writer and publisher during the early 20th century. By using this title Gibson contrasts the future envisaged during Gernsback's style of science fiction and the present, cyberpunk era that Gibson was establishing. The story appeared in Gibson's Burning Chrome anthology.

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[edit] Plot summary

During his assignment to photograph 1930s era futuristic architecture, Parker begins to come into contact with the "continuum," an alternate reality containing the possible future of the world represented by the architecture he is photographing – a future that could have been, but was not, thereby contrasting modernist optimism and postmodern loneliness.

[edit] Film, TV or theatrical adaptations

The Gernsback Continuum was adapted in 1993 as Tomorrow Calling, a short TV film by Tim Leandro for Film4 Productions.[1] Originally shown on Channel 4, the film was also presented at the British Film Festival, 4-10 October 1996.

[edit] Footnotes

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