Anis Shivani’s novel Karachi Raj was released last summer by HarperCollins/Fourth Estate. Soraya: Sonnets comes out this month from Black Widow Press in Boston. His next book of criticism, Assessing Literary Writing in the Twenty-First Century, will appear in early 2017.
More to the point, since we seem nowhere close to producing androids today, is the issue of how we can judge humanity, since in the novel there are many ambiguous cases: Deckard starts feeling empathy for androids, especially after taking a liking to Rachael, which should disqualify him from retiring androids (because he’s not human enough to do it?); a fellow bounty hunter, Phil Desch, who suspects he may be an android implanted with false memories, passes the human test despite showing all the signs that he lacks the empathy to be human; Rachael is a complicated case, as is one of the last remaining “andys”, Irmgard Baty, who seems to be as empathetic as any human in the novel, including having sympathy for the “chickenhead,” J.R. Isidore, the novel’s Christ-like innocent, who gives shelter to the last three androids, even at the risk of personal harm.
Consider how close Dick’s dystopia is to the social condition in the US today: we physically enfold, or hold with both hands, little empathy boxes (iPhones or iPads) that instantly summon up waves of “Mercerism” — ie, unwarranted sympathy for causes we may not have personal stakes in; animals have become the most precious of all things in the West, the singular commodity that determines our humanness, the surest litmus test of how we rank in empathy; and biology and genetics determine the degree to which each of us will be assimilated or segregated, the age of meritocracy having come to a merciless close.
I have wondered why Dick was so obsessed with the nature of identity and of reality at the inception of the postmodern age, when in Eisenhower’s — and, later, Kennedy’s, Johnson’s and Nixon’s — America, technology did not yet have the powers of surveillance and intrusion it would later develop in the age of personal computers, which only began in the 1980s. But it is ever the case that the writer who defines the problems of an era in its formative stage captures it most acutely (Plato and Aristotle for the dawn of philosophy, Cervantes and Shakespeare for the emergence of humanism, Defoe and Swift for the rise of capitalist liberalism), which also means that such writers — like Dick for the post-capitalist age — are visionaries who help realise, and even shape, the actual contours of the future.
We are all Dickians today whether we know it or not, just as it was true for Shakespeare or Dickens in earlier times. The visual landscape Blade Runner chose is not how I imagined Dick’s future world, but for better or worse the Hollywood version of the future, through countless movies inspired by Dick, determines our interpretation of globalisation or technology or terrorism, and even shapes our responses, such as forms of surveillance or counter-surveillance.
I do think that popular culture is untrue to Dick’s humanistic vision. No matter how bleak and desperate things get in Dick’s novels, the essential optimism of California in its golden age always comes through. The violence, even when it occurs, is not of the unforgiving kind that we know from Hollywood, and there is an abiding gentleness, true to California, that Dick experienced, and that I too shared in later decades when that spirit still reigned in the exact spots in southern and northern California where Dick spent his life.
I come back to the question of why the nature of reality is so indecipherable today, as Dick foresaw in Time Out of Joint and made his lifelong project to explicate in various plots. Why can’t we tell who we really are; why do we often suspect that all around us is a scrim of unreality; why do we have the uncanny sense that we function as automatons, inhabiting only the surface, unable to penetrate to the truth? Being positioned in the post-capitalist economy as abstract commodities ourselves is part of the answer, but the deeper truth may simply be the weight of history: as everything becomes known and repeated, we do not feel newness about anything. This is less true in “developing” societies (developing toward what? unreality?), but the phenomenon is rapidly becoming inescapable everywhere. What this means — not to avoid the point — is that we have ceased being human, since we have ceased being historical subjects. Hence all the doubt.
Technology, in the novels of Dick, ironically appears as the primary means to return our historicity to ourselves. Conditions such as persisting in some sentient form after death, the distinction between humans and humanoid robots disappearing, artificial intelligence taking over beyond the intentions of humans, or boundaries between separate minds eroding through drugs or other stimulation, are all intended to shake us from our reverie, to make us think of rising again to face our desperate aloneness in the universe.
Every Dick novel articulates this desperation, peculiar in the shape it takes in post-capitalist societies, to a higher pitch than any other writer of his era managed. It is because he refused to accept any ‘reality’ (which is just a particular imposition of a particular stage of technology on our place in history) as given that he was therefore free, in that bygone optimistic Californian way, to reimagine all of reality.
I feel the same joy reading Dick’s novels today as I did when I first started reading novels like Robinson Crusoe and Gulliver’s Travels at an incomprehensibly early age: I feel the same sense of pure wonder about what it might mean to be human, crisscrossing multiple dimensions that remain hidden in our customary sleepwalking. And while those early novels addressed quandaries to identity posed by emerging capitalist individualism (the same arc where developing countries found themselves during the post-war years), Dick’s novels ask parallel questions for the post-modern, post-capitalist, post-ideological era. The pleasure for me is indescribable (even if the books are sad), the immersion is total, as my doubts about reality are confirmed, so that I may be left with nothing, to discover myself anew.
Reading Dick is for me a profoundly personal experience. I have travelled the same journey with him, in many ways and in many places, in different times and milieus, and have come to know that his way of suspending reality is the only way out — or in. His plots are not that complex after all, and, besides, there is really only the one plot he knows, which is true of all great writers.
Published in Dawn, Books & Authors, August 21st, 2016