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Imaginary Worlds Not So Far Off

Cory Doctorow's new book is called "Radicalized: Four Tales of our Present Moment"
Macmillan Publishers
Cory Doctorow's new book is called "Radicalized: Four Tales of our Present Moment"

Imagine a world in which your toaster will only toast bread from approved vendors and your dishwasher will only clean approved dishes using specific brands of soap. Think that’s far-fetched? Cory Doctorow doesn’t.

The science-fiction author points to familiar headaches in modern life. Many computer printers will only print using brand-name inks. A DVD player sold in the U.S. won’t play DVDs from the U.K.

Doctorow doesn’t see these as inevitable annoyances, but rather a pattern in which we’re forced to use products in ways that benefit the corporations that produce them. He explores that theme in one of the stories in his new book, Radicalized: Four Tales of our Present Moment.

“All the most abusive uses…have come very slowly and have percolated up and been normalized one little use at a time,” he told Living Lab Radio. “And I fear that we're going to wake up one morning with a new kind of feudalism.”

By that he means a system in which only the elite get to own property and everyone else is a tenant. Tenants must use the property in accord with the wishes of its true owner.

The aristocracy in modern life is not made of kings and queens, but rather “these trans-human immortal colony organisms called limited liability companies for whom we represent a kind of inconvenient gut flora,” Doctorow said.

Doctorow, who is  the co-editor of Boing Boing, has become an activist for the open sharing of information and access to technology.

In another story in the book, a superhero comes to earth to take on police brutality and corruption. But once he questions white supremacy, the public turns on him.

“And people start asking, ‘Well we call him an American hero. How do we know he won't become an Iranian hero?’” Doctorow said. “That head-spinning ejection from the white privilege boat into the seas of racialization is something that I think is very much alive…in our debates.”

Though the stories have dark themes, Doctorow thinks they’re also optimistic.

“I think that science fiction can help us find our way to a point where we start to care about and take action on issues before it's too late to do anything about it,” he said. “We are always poised on a knife edge between denialism and nihilism.”

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Web content produced by Elsa Partan.

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Elsa Partan is a producer and newscaster with CAI. She first came to the station in 2002 as an intern and fell in love with radio. She is a graduate of Bryn Mawr College and the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. From 2006 to 2009, she covered the state of Wyoming for the NPR member station Wyoming Public Media in Laramie. She was a newspaper reporter at The Mashpee Enterprise from 2010 to 2013. She lives in Falmouth with her husband and two daughters.