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Article
Better to Move by Foot or Slidewalk: Post-Automobile Environments in Asimov’s The Caves of Steel and Clarke’s The City and the Stars
Extrapolation
  • Jeremy Withers, Iowa State University
Document Type
Article
Publication Version
Accepted Manuscript
Publication Date
6-1-2021
DOI
10.3828/extr.2021.7
Abstract

This essay focuses on Asimov’s The Caves of Steel and Clarke’s The City and the Stars, two works published during the 1950s that both largely abolish the automobile as a stern rebuke to that decade’s enthusiastic acceptance of the car. However, these works hold differing ideas regarding desirable and effective alternatives to cars, for Caves of Steel favors machine-enhanced transportation in the form of slidewalks (a vast network of moving sidewalks), whereas City and the Stars privileges the simple act of walking. This essay demonstrates, therefore, how Asimov’s and Clarke’s privileging of different alternatives to automobility also reveals disagreements on two important questions: to what degree technology and human bodies should intertwine, and whether collectivism or individualism should hold greater priority.

Comments

This accepted article is published as Withers, J., Better to Move by Foot or Slidewalk: Post-Automobile Environments in Asimov’s The Caves of Steel and Clarke’s The City and the Stars. Extrapolation, 2021 62(2);111-131. DOI: 10.3828/extr.2021.7. Posted with permission.

Copyright Owner
Liverpool University Press
Language
en
File Format
application/pdf
Citation Information
Jeremy Withers. "Better to Move by Foot or Slidewalk: Post-Automobile Environments in Asimov’s The Caves of Steel and Clarke’s The City and the Stars" Extrapolation Vol. 62 Iss. 2 (2021) p. 111 - 131
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/jeremy_withers/12/