Table of Contents
1. Introduction 3
2. Concepts and back story 4
2.1 Setting and storyline 4
2.2 Elements of the future world 5
3. Hierarchies and discrimination 9
3.1 The value of animals 9
3.2 Human relationships and hierarchies 9
3.3 The relationship humankind technique 11
4. The depiction of humans and androids 13
4.1 Empathy and being human 13
4.2 The ambiguity in the depiction of androids 14
5. Conclusion 16
6. Bibliography 17
3
1. Introduction
“Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?” is one out of at least six novels by Philip K. Dick that deal substantially with the questions surrounding androids or replicants, as they are called in Ridley Scott’s film “Blade Runner”, which is based on the novel. It is embedded in Dick’s definition of Science Fiction,
(…) a society that does not in fact exist, but is prededicated on our own knowledge – that is, our own society acts as a jumping-off point for it….this is the essence of science fiction, the conceptual dislocation within the society so that as a result a new society is generated in the authors mind, transferred to paper, and from paper it occurs as a convulsive shock in the reader’s mind, the shock of dysrecognition. 1
It is exactly the distortion between the real as the jumping-off point cited above and the hypothetical, unreal, fictional which is to create a critical comment on the world the present reader lives in. The special focus on humanlike androids in “Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep” implies a particular philosophical issue. Of course, the somewhat murky, obscure and intransparent depiction of androids involves the problem of man-machine relationships, which can to a certain extend be equated with human-android relationships. But Dick goes a step further, pointing out the differences as well as the parallels between both the android and the human being, using ambiguous descriptions and playing with the reader’s sympathy for both sides. One could even argue that Dick tried to create a kind of meeting halfway between man and android, which will be analyzed in 4.1 and 4.2. Certainly, Dick himself faces difficulties when trying to define the android as “a thing somehow generated to deceive us in a cruel way, to cause us to think it to be one of ourselves.” 2 Although this is according to Aaron Barlow a
mere description showing that Dick might have been unsure of the exact nature of the androids he created in his stories and novels, it meets exactly to core of our analysis, which deals with the impact and the effects created by this somewhat ambiguous representation of human and android life.
1 Dick, Philip K. The Shifting Realities of Philip K. Dick: Selected Literary and Philosophical Writings, Ed. L. Sutin, New York: Pantheon, 1995, p. 99.
2 Barlow, Aaron. “Philip K. Dick’s Androids: Victimized Victimizers”, Retrofitting Blade Runner, Ed. Judith B. Kerman. Bowling Green: Bowling Green State University Popular Press, 1991, p. 76.
4
2. Concepts and back story
2.1 Setting and Storyline
The setting of “Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep” is San Francisco in the post-nuclear- holocaust world of 1992, in later editions 2021, after World War Terminus. This fictional last World War and the radiation poisoning that it brought about is the reason for the earth decaying and all life forms facing the risk of extinction. As animals are endangered and very rare, owning and caring for them is seen as a civic virtue and status symbol. To obtain and maintain social standing, people like the protagonist Rick Deckard can buy cheaper, artificial, “electric” ones. The people remaining on earth are vehemently encouraged to emigrate to the off-world colonies as loitering “on Earth potentially meant finding oneself abruptly classed as biologically unacceptable, a menace to the pristine heredity of the race.” 3 An incentive is
provided by the free offer of a personal, humanlike android in the colonies on Mars, which is to fullfill the function of a personal servant to the emigrants. Androids illegally leaving the Colonies, returning back to earth, are “retired” by bounty hunters such as Rick Deckard, who is required to apply tests like the Voigt-Kampff test to identify the organic androids physically indistiguishable from humans.
Rick Deckard is chosen to find and to retire six of the very sophisticated Nexus-6 androids, which would give him the possibillity to purchase a real sheep instead of his electric one. Meeting Rachel Rosen at the Rosen Corporation, the makers of the Nexus-6 models, he adminsters the Voigt-Kampff on her, which finally reveals that she is an android, Rick’s faith in the disparity between humans and androids having been thrown into doubt for the first time. Having retired Polkov disguised as the Russian agent Sandor Kaladyi in his hovercar, Rick fails to administer the test on the opera singer Luba Luft, who calls the fake police department. Phil Resch, unaware of his working for a kind of conspirational police department, retires Officer Garland, who is actually one of the androids on Deckarts list. Depressed after the retirement of Luba Luft with Resch’s help and concerned with his increasing tendency to empathise with androids, Deckard buys a genuine goat in order to reassure himself.
3 Dick, Philip K. Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? 1968. New York: Balantine Books, 1982, p. 13. All further quotations from Dick’s novel refer to this edition.
5
The “chickenhead” John R. Isidor, who works for a veterinerian service, actually a false pet repair frim, remaines in an abandoned suburban apartment building, as he is not allowed to emigrate to the Martian Colonies due to the fact that he is genetically and intellectually too far deteriorated. There, he gets in touch with the three remainig Nexus-6 models who treat him badly. Deckard, who has meanwhile accepted Rachel Rosen’s help, ends up having sex with her in a hotel room before they both head towards Isidor’s apartment to retire the remainig androids. He is saved by Mercer from being shot in the back by Pris, one of the androids, and manages to retire them all. Back home, he finds his wife on the roof of his apartment building and learns that Rachel, who confessed him in the hovercar on their way to Isidor’s apartment that she had sex with a lot of bounty hunters, just to stop them from doing their job, and that she furthermore failed to convince Resch of the absurdity that lies in killing humanlike androids, has killed the goat.
Totally depressed, he flies north in his hovercar to the Oregon desert. Walking up a hill in the manner of Mercer, Rick is struck by a rock whereupon he seems to awake from his mental fusion with Mercer and quickly returns to his car. The live toad which he finds in the sand turns out to be synthetic back home, but Rick doesn’t seem to mind any more.
2.2 Elements of the future world
From the beginning on, the reader is introduced to a peculiar mix of the familiar and the strange, projected in a dystopian post war scenario. The first indicator for the importance of technology in the fictional future world after World War Terminus is the Penfield mood organ, a brain stimulation device that obviously can create moods and feelings and also serves as alarm bell. Rick is awakened by a “merry little surge of electricity piped by automatic alarm from the mood organ besides his bed (…).” 4 This technical device seems to influence
and control people’s behaviour, though the user has the chance to set the organ by dialling certain moods. The scheduled mood for Rick that morning is “a businesslike professional attitude”, whereas Iran’s designated mood is a “six hour self-accusatory depression”. Having discovered the intellectual emptiness and the mere absence of real life connected with the use of the mood organ, she admits that she found out a setting for despair which reflects her actual feeling and which she therefore puts on her schedule twice a month. 5 4 Dick, p. 1 5 Cf. Dick, p. 2-3.
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Michael Kratky, 2006, Science Fiction analysis: Philip K. Dick's "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?", Munich, GRIN Publishing GmbH
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