We Momentum Classic Science Fiction eBook Yevgeny Zamyatin
Download As PDF : We Momentum Classic Science Fiction eBook Yevgeny Zamyatin
Yevgeny Zamyatin's We is set in an urban glass city called OneState, regulated by spies and secret police. Citizens of the tyrannical OneState wear identical clothing and are distinguished only by the number assigned to them at birth. The story follows a man called D-503, who dangerously begins to veer from the 'norms' of society after meeting I-330, a woman who defies the rules. D-503 soon finds himself caught up in a secret plan to destroy OneState and liberate the city.
The failed utopia of We has been compared to the works of H.G. Wells, George Orwell, and Aldous Huxley. It was the first novel banned by the Soviets in 1921, and was finally published in its home country over a half-century later.
We is a part of Momentum's Classic Science Fiction series.
"The best single work of science fiction yet written." — Ursula K. Le Guin
We Momentum Classic Science Fiction eBook Yevgeny Zamyatin
Banned by the Soviets!One thousand years after the One State has conquered the world, the survivors live in a city of glass and steele, enclosed behind a giant Green Wall, and outside the wall is destruction from the Two-hundred Years War, an unknown, wild and forbidden place. The city is designed for mass surveillance of the citizens, and the Bureau of Guardians (secret police) watch everything. Logic controls society completely, and an individual’s behavior is based on formulas and equations created by the One State - thus ensuring security and happiness for all citizens. (Sound familiar to another novel?)
A man called D-503 (everyone is a number, no proper names) is a scientist heading the creation of the spacecraft Integral, which will allow the One State to invade and conquer the other planets. His lover, O-90, has been assigned to D-503, and they have Sexy-time on scheduled nights. O-90 cannot have children and this makes her deeply sad.
But one day D-503 meets another woman, I-330, and is attracted to her. I-330 smokes cigarettes, drinks alcohol, and flirts with D-503, and all of this is highly illegal. But D-503 becomes obsessed with the new woman, his strange dreams confuse him. I-330 reveals to him that a secret society is planning a revolt, and she wants D-503 to assist because of his his position while building the Integral spacecraft.
No more from me, I’d just be giving spoilers. But this short novel was excellent, and both George Orwell and Aldous Huxley were obviously taken with it. Totalitarian government mixed with in-the-future Science Fiction - what’s not to love?
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We Momentum Classic Science Fiction eBook Yevgeny Zamyatin Reviews
An incredible novel not just for its time, as most great science fiction relies on ideas more than technology, but for its continuing relevance. It's a chilling vision of a society in which the reigning morality is a combination of Utilitarianism (a la John Stuart Mill) and absolute equality (a la socialism). While the plot involves these philosophies taken to an extreme, the moral arguments presented in defense of these extremes will be all too familiar. In the ongoing push/pull between the hive and the human, this book presents a warning of what happens when we subvert the individual in extreme ways in service of the "greater good".
Certainly I was not alone in wondering -- How can a book publisher not recognize the importance, on many levels, of crediting a work's translator, alive or dead? Anyway, there it is. G**gle books also has a 99c ebook, which includes not only the credit but also the 1924 and 1959 prefaces written by Zilboorg, should anyone be interested. The translation is decidedly less 'modern' than those of recent decades, which for some of us will greatly enhance the reading of this nigh century-old novel.
Written in 1921, WE is a novel before its time. It is often compared to Orwell's "1984" (written in 1949) and Huxley's "Brave New World" (written in 1932). Orwell, who started writing "1984" eight months after having read a translation of "We", acknowledged the influence of Zamyatin's novel. He further said that Huxley too must have been influenced by it, although Huxley denied it; still, Kurt Vonnegut said that in writing "Player Piano" he "cheerfully ripped off the plot of 'Brave New World', whose plot had been cheerfully ripped off from Yevgeny Zamyatin's 'We'."
A brief overview The central character, and narrator, is D-503. He is an engineer and the builder of the Integral, a spaceship by which One State plans to conquer other planets. Like all other "ciphers" in One State, D-503 is identified by a number, not a name. Daily life is organized according to principles of efficiency articulated by the American engineer Frederick Winslow Taylor (who many Bolsheviks and early Soviets thought of as a guru). So, D-503 conducts himself according to the Table of Hours, which regulates twenty-two of the hours of the day, leaving two hours of free time. D-503 spends some of his free time with O-90. With permission, they can close the blinds and have sex in privacy. Otherwise, everyone lives in all-glass buildings, in full view of one and all. Further, the secret police or Guardians are omnipresent. The action of the novel is triggered when D-503 encounters I-330, a minx with unusually white, sharp teeth who flouts many of the rules of One State. D-503 is critical of I-330 on social/political grounds, but at the same time he is captivated by her. And so begins a train of subversive conduct and a chain of events that threatens the regimented harmony of One State.
I read WE as part of my ongoing survey of prominent Russian literature. But it is even more prominent in the realm of dystopian science fiction. Ursula Le Guin called it "the best single work of science fiction yet written." To quote from the Foreword to this Modern Library edition by Bruce Sterling, WE "has whole sets of sci-fi themes and conceits that were entirely fresh when Zamyatin created them hermetically sealed cities, synthetic food, unisex suits, Metropolis-like crowds of drones marching through cyclopean apartment blocks, whizzing, roaring trips in giant spaceships, mind control through brain surgery. They're clichés now, of course but they were only reduced to clichés through decades of effort by lesser artists."
The prose is brisk, clipped, and pulsating. More than modern, it is futuristic. Supposedly, the novel is studded with allusions and symbols. Zamyatin renders "emotions in equations, relationships in geometry, and philosophy in calculus." Although I don't know Russian, I believe this translation by Natasha Randall captures superbly Zamyatin's unique style.
It so happens, however, that I don't take well to science fiction or dystopian fiction. While I recognize WE as brilliant, I didn't particularly enjoy it. As for its place in Russian literature, I see it as a very early prediction of the Bolshevik revolution evolving from dynamic and progressive political thought to hidebound dogma supporting a totalitarian regime.
My all-time favorite dystopian novel. I've read it many times, recommended it to friends and hated when it was out of print for a long time. I purchased this book as a gift. My only complaint is that the editors of this newer edition felt obligated to make the writing more accessible and in doing so, took away some of its literary strength. For example, they note in the chapter where the hero leaves the protected area for the wilds of the untamed Ancients, that they speak in the language of the older ones, using a Latin vernacular. So instead of hearing the hero being addressed as "thou", we simply hear "you". Hearing the old language is a key part of his getting the feel of this previously undiscovered place where such alien concepts as love, jealousy and passion still exist. hen he hears her say, "Thou loveth fog, dost thou?", the reader experiences the chill that the hero feels as he begins his journey away from safe and sterile. It's a beautiful story- as written. Dumbing it down, even if it seems like helpful edits, takes away from the novel.
Banned by the Soviets!
One thousand years after the One State has conquered the world, the survivors live in a city of glass and steele, enclosed behind a giant Green Wall, and outside the wall is destruction from the Two-hundred Years War, an unknown, wild and forbidden place. The city is designed for mass surveillance of the citizens, and the Bureau of Guardians (secret police) watch everything. Logic controls society completely, and an individual’s behavior is based on formulas and equations created by the One State - thus ensuring security and happiness for all citizens. (Sound familiar to another novel?)
A man called D-503 (everyone is a number, no proper names) is a scientist heading the creation of the spacecraft Integral, which will allow the One State to invade and conquer the other planets. His lover, O-90, has been assigned to D-503, and they have Sexy-time on scheduled nights. O-90 cannot have children and this makes her deeply sad.
But one day D-503 meets another woman, I-330, and is attracted to her. I-330 smokes cigarettes, drinks alcohol, and flirts with D-503, and all of this is highly illegal. But D-503 becomes obsessed with the new woman, his strange dreams confuse him. I-330 reveals to him that a secret society is planning a revolt, and she wants D-503 to assist because of his his position while building the Integral spacecraft.
No more from me, I’d just be giving spoilers. But this short novel was excellent, and both George Orwell and Aldous Huxley were obviously taken with it. Totalitarian government mixed with in-the-future Science Fiction - what’s not to love?
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