The Sprawl
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In William Gibson's fiction, the Sprawl is a colloquial name for the Boston-Atlanta Metropolitan Axis (BAMA), an urban environment taken to the extreme.
The novels Neuromancer (1984), Count Zero (1986), and Mona Lisa Overdrive (1988) (collectively known as The Sprawl trilogy) take place in this environment, as well as some of the short stories collected in Burning Chrome (1986).
[edit] Characteristics
The Sprawl arose due to increasing urbanization on the eastern USA coast, and by the time of the novels it is one immense city, mostly covered by geodesic domes that always seem to be leaking. Due to these domes, the Sprawl is virtually a world of its own, complete with its own climate, and lacking a real day-night cycle. Instead it has an endless grey day, where the actors change but the play stays the same. The Sprawl holds enclaves where the rich live, but the majority of the supercity's population is quite poor. However, almost everyone in the Sprawl is using advanced technology on a daily basis. Millions of people are addicted to soap opera simstims: simulated stimuli being a technology that allows for the recording and playback of sensory input through neural interface. These shows are thus witnessed by the 'viewer' who essentially becomes one of the characters by experiencing the latter's senses. Many others spend hours in the matrix on a daily basis for work or pleasure. Indeed, for Sprawl inhabitants, technology is a commodity as mundane as air.
[edit] Comparative setting
The Sprawl is a typical example of a cyberpunk setting. Related places visited in Gibson's fiction include Chiba City, a high-tech district near Tokyo, and Freeside, an orbital complex which includes the family estate of the rich Tessier-Ashpool clan, as well as the Rastafarian colony New Zion. A notable non-fictional precursor to The Sprawl is BosWash, the present-day group of metropolitan areas extending from Boston to Washington, DC. The Sprawl also bears relation to other fictional settings:
- Coruscant, the capital of the Galactic Republic and later Empire in Star Wars. It is an ecumenopolis, a city which takes up an entire planet.
- Trantor, capital of the galactic empire in Isaac Asimov's Foundation Series. With the exception of the Imperial Palace, entirely enclosed in artificial domes.
- Mega-City One in the Judge Dredd series.
[edit] See also
Novels: The Sprawl Trilogy: Neuromancer, Count Zero, Mona Lisa Overdrive • The Difference Engine (with Bruce Sterling) • The Bridge Trilogy: Virtual Light, Idoru, All Tomorrow's Parties • Pattern Recognition • Spook Country
Short stories Johnny Mnemonic • The Gernsback Continuum • Fragments of a Hologram Rose • The Belonging Kind • Hinterlands • Red Star, Winter Orbit • New Rose Hotel • The Winter Market • Dogfight • Burning Chrome • Skinner's Room
Film adaptations: Johnny Mnemonic • New Rose Hotel • Pattern Recognition
Miscellanea: Agrippa (A Book of the Dead) • No Maps for These Territories • X-Files episodes