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Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker

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Title: Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker


1
Douglas Adams,The Hitchhikers Guide to the
Galaxy (1979)
2
What put the 42 in CompLit 342?
3
Douglas Adams, 1952-2001
  • British writer, broadcaster, and environmentalist
  • Wrote episodes of Doctor Who before HG2G also
    portions of the last episode of Monty Pythons
    Flying Circus
  • Also wrote non-fiction on science, technology,
    and endangered species
  • Published 7 complete SF novels, three short
    stories, one collaborative work, and one
    incomplete one

4
The Trilogy of Five
  • The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy (1979)
  • The Restaurant at the End of the Universe (1980)
  • Life, the Universe, and Everything (1982)
  • So Long and Thanks for All the Fish (1984)
  • Mostly Harmless (1992)
  • Plus the short story Young Zaphod Plays it Safe
    (1986)

5
Adams on Writing Science Fiction
  • I didnt mean to write SF. I just exaggerate a
    lot.
  • I never set out to parody SF, but to use the
    trappings of SF to look at other things.
  • Im not a parodist - parody is one of the easier
    forms of writing, and its one thats too easy to
    slip into when you arent trying hard enough.
  • No matter how good the ideas are, a lot of SF
    is terribly badly written.

6
Adams Use of Humour and Satire
  • Genre conventions
  • Themes - especially paradoxes
  • Narrative techniques
  • Anecdotal writing style
  • Self-referential humour (including references to
    his earlier work in both comedy and serious SF)
  • How traditional is it? How New Wave? Is it
    both or neither?
  • Ironic post-apocalyptic narrative
  • Satire as reflection on the state of the genre

7
Multimedia Interpretations
  • The original radio plays (became the first two
    books)
  • The 1981 BBC miniseries (based mostly on the
    radio play but incorporates material from the
    first two books)
  • The 2005 movie (based on the first book but
    incorporates material from the other four)
  • The second series of radio plays (based on the
    last three books)
  • The 1984 computer game (based mostly on the first
    book)
  • Graphic novels and photoillustrated editions
  • Stage productions
  • Recordings and audiobooks
  • Adams Online Encyclopedia, H2G2
  • Eoin Colfers And Another Thing (2009)

8
From the introduction to the anthology of all 5
books
  • The history of HG2G isso complicated that every
    time I tell it I contradict myself, and whenever
    I do get it right Im misquoted.
  • The Guide has appeared in so many forms - books,
    radio, a television series, records, anda major
    motion picture - each time with a different
    storyline that even its most acute followers have
    become baffled at times.
  • Adams considered the radio play to be his
    favourite version, but was interested in varying
    the story to fit each medium it was in

9
Adams on Multimedia
  • When radio came out, everyone said books will
    disappear. When television came out, everyone
    said that radio will disappear. It was the same
    when movies came out. People find new ways of
    enjoying themselves. There's something about the
    experience of a book which nothing else will ever
    replace.but it doesn't mean anything else has
    got to be thrown out.
  • Moving something from one medium to another is
    very interestinglike carrying a picture or a
    piece of clothing from one bit of lighting to
    another. Suddenly it looks very different. What
    interests meis the way in whichdifferent media
    interrelate you can hand things off from one to
    another, you can exploit each others strengths
    and weaknesses.

10
The Guide
  • Expository narrative device
  • Self-referential commentary
  • HG2G vs. Encyclopedia Galactica (reference to
    Isaac Asimovs Foundation)
  • Master narrative / sacred text, yet originally
    created for mundane purposes (inspired by a real
    travelogue of Europe)
  • Inaccuracies / discrepancies / need for constant
    updating
  • Seeming irrelevancy of entries but are they
    really?
  • In case of major discrepancy its always reality
    thats got it wrong

11
42
  • Is there an answer to everything?
  • If we found the answer, or the question, would we
    know we did?
  • Can one book give us all the answers?
  • Whats more important the question or the answer?

12
The Babelfish
  • Parody of universal translator convention (also
    now the name of a universal translation website)
  • Removal of barriers to communication - more of a
    problem than it solves?
  • Babelfish and the existence (or not) of God?

13
Adams and God
  • Isnt it enough to see that a garden is
    beautiful without having to believe that there
    are fairies at the bottom of it?
  • Adams evangelical atheism vs. his fascination
    with religions
  • e.g. philosophers objection to Deep Thought
    Babelfish debate planet factory and creationism
    Viltvodel VI subplot in the film
  • Is Adams satirizing God, or organized religion?

14
Adams and Animals
  • Adams environmentalist work
  • Relative intelligence of humans and animals, esp.
    dolphins and mice
  • Whos really the more intelligent species, and
    why?
  • Paradoxical role of Earth and humans mostly
    harmless, yet a key part of the search for the
    meaning of life

15
Adams and Technology
  • Early advocate of hypertext one of the first
    people in UK to own a Mac H2G2 website as
    precursor/alternative to Wikipedia
  • Space travel
  • AI and androids
  • Technology often causes as many problems as it
    solves
  • Given the destruction caused by the randomness
    in the universe, why do we also have to deal with
    the phone company?
  • Significance of seemingly mundane items (towels,
    digital watches)

16
(No Transcript)
17
Improbable Fictional Worlds
  • Improbability Drive as parody of both physics and
    possible-worlds theory
  • Adams called the sum total of all possible worlds
    The Whole Sort of General Mish Mash
  • Different versions of the story as counterpart
    worlds use of counterpart worlds in the story
    itself
  • We talk about one universe but the universe I
    live inis revealed to my own sensesand the
    universe you live in is absolutely subjective to
    you.

18
Adams Use of Social Satire
  • References to the socioeconomic and political
    conditions of Britain in the 1970s possible
    relation to the British alternative comedy
    movement
  • British establishments obsession with paperwork
    and bureaucracy
  • Representations of corporate/consumer culture
    e.g. Magrathean planet factory Sirius
    Cybernetics Corp. Answer to Everything as profit
    motive
  • Mr. Prosser and Vogons as parallel characters
    (also suggested by Prossers ancestry?)
  • Depiction of Vogon society in later adaptations
  • Role of art planetary formations poetry as
    weapon of mass destruction

19
  • Zaphod as Adams satirical representation of
    politicians
  • Extra head and limb relating to his character?
  • Changing nature of his motives in different
    versions Money? Fame? Power? Just because?

20
  • Explanations of Fords name mistaking the
    dominant lifeform footnote on his real name
  • Mostly harmless - commentary on editors?
    Deliberate understatement?
  • Arthurs search for the perfect cup of tea vs.
    Fords search for the perfect party
  • Arthur and Ford as ironic observers and guides to
    each other as well as to the reader
  • Possible origin of Arthurs name The Plain Mans
    Pathway to Heaven (1601) - HG2G as ironic
    spiritual biography?

21
  • Arthur as everyman character vs. Trillian as
    misunderstood genius (relating to Fords opinion
    of astrophysicists?)
  • Trillian as challenge to gender stereotypes in
    traditional SF while still fitting into them

22
Adams on the Nature of Life, the Universe, and
EverythingFrom a 1998 Lecture at
Cambridgehttp//www.douglasadams.se/stuff/sand.ht
ml
  • On life a collection that includes a fruit fly
    and Richard Dawkins and the Great Barrier Reef is
    an awkward set of objects to try and compare.
    When we try and figure out what the rules are
    that we are looking for, trying to find a rule
    thats self-evidently true, that turns out to be
    very, very hard.
  • in the absence of an intentional creator, you
    cannot say what life is, because it simply
    depends on what set of definitions you include in
    your overall definition. Without a god, life is
    only a matter of opinion.

23
  • On God Man the maker looks at his world and
    says So who made this then? Who made this?
    you can see why its a treacherous question.
    Early man thinks, Well, because theres only one
    sort of being I know about who makes things,
    whoever made all this must therefore be a much
    bigger, much more powerful and necessarily
    invisible, one of me and because I tend to be the
    strong one who does all the stuff, hes probably
    male. And so we have the idea of a god. Then,
    because when we make things we do it with the
    intention of doing something with them, early man
    asks himself, If he made it, what did he make it
    for? Now the real trap springs, because early
    man is thinking, This world fits me very well.
    Here are all these things that support me and
    feed me and look after me yes, this world fits
    me nicely and he reaches the inescapable
    conclusion that whoever made it, made it for
    him.
  • The puddle analogy we perceive the world as
    being made for us, but were we made for it
    instead?

24
  • as we become more and more scientifically
    literate, its worth remembering that the
    fictions with which we previously populated our
    world may have some function that its worth
    trying to understand and preserve the essential
    components of, rather than throwing out the baby
    with the bath water because even though we may
    not accept the reasons given for them being here
    in the first place, it may well be that there are
    good practical reasons for them, or something
    like them, to be there.
  • e.g. the monetary system, which nowadays is based
    on mutual agreement more than on physical objects
  • Purpose of fictional worlds (worldviews, etc.) is
    to help us explain things in the actual world we
    dont yet understand

25
  • On the universe if you imagine that our
    Universe is simply one layer and that there is an
    infinite multiplicity of universes spreading out
    on either side, not only does it solve the
    problem, but the problem simply goes away. This
    is exactly how you expect light to behave under
    those circumstances. Quantum mechanics has claims
    to be predicated on the notion that the Universe
    behaves as if there was a multiplicity of
    universes, but it rather strains our credulity to
    think that there actually would be.
  • One way or another, this is a deeply misleading
    Universe. Wherever we look its beginning to be
    extremely alarming and extremely upsetting to our
    sense of who we aregreat, strapping, physical
    people living in a Universe that exists almost
    entirely for usthat it just isnt the case.

26
  • Why Deep Thought? The computer...enables us to
    see how life works. Now that is an
    extraordinarily important point because it
    becomes self-evident that life, that all forms of
    complexity, do not flow downwards, they flow
    upwards and theres a whole grammar that anybody
    who is used to using computers is now familiar
    with, which means that evolution is no longer a
    particular thing, because anybody whos ever
    looked at the way a computer program works, knows
    that very, very simple iterative pieces of code,
    each line of which is tremendously
    straightforward, give rise to enormously complex
    phenomena in a computer.

27
Adams and Other Writers
  • Influenced more by New Wave (incl. Lem and Dick)
    than by traditional SF, when influenced by SF
    at all
  • Themes shared by Adams and Lem consequences of
    extraterrestrial contact role of
    academic/expository discourse observation and
    description of otherworldly phenomena extensive
    uses of wordplay
  • Themes shared by Adams and Dick role of AI and
    animals, esp. in relation to humans roles of
    corporate/consumer culture post-apocalyptic
    narratives playful responses to SF and to the
    actual world
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