Post-dog tales about human extinction
Clifford D. Simak’s fixup novella City (1952) should be re-read as one of the first pieces of posthumanist science-fiction writing. This article argues that naming the book after the first story, and not after the fourth one, “Desertion”, was misleading because the book is not one of the “urban science-fiction stories”. City rather explores what would happen if people had the opportunity of instantly entering paradise (Nick Bostrom’s “posthuman mode of being”), even at the cost of deserting the human body. A further hypothesis suggested here is that John W. Campbell, the founding father of the Golden Age of Science Fiction, initially refusedto publish “Desertion” and never published City’s final story, “The Simple Way”, in his iconicAstounding Science Fiction magazine, because the posthumanist character of these storiescontradicted his “classical” view of science fiction.
More...