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Alfred Bester
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Michael
(last edited Sep 06, 2013 09:11AM)
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Sep 06, 2013 09:11AM

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I also, and I don't believe this is a spoiler, found the rape not only unnecessary for the story, but almost gratuitous in nature. If you read this book, you'll see that it's a very short scene and only inferred. There are no graphic details but a rape occurs. Why an editor didn't just snip it out is beyond me.

That book is the reason I'm not reading this month's pick. I thought the rape scene was gratuitous and the way women were portrayed was sexist and demeaning even by Fifties standards. I thought it was even worse than Heinlein. At least Heinlein pretended to make women powerful even if they were ultimately just objects of a teen boy's wet dreams. In The Stars My Destination, Bester really comes off as a misogynist. It's one thing for a book from the era have ideas about women's roles, marriage and romance; it's completely another for it to portray them as objects as Bester does.
For the record, I rarely read sexism and racism into books. It has to be really, really blatant for me to even notice, much less comment.

I have lower expectations for works before the 80's, if not lower standards, but it's disappointing to hear that it was so gratuitous.


Interesting... I don't seem to recall that the rape scene had anything to do with teleportation. I can go back and double-check this, but I don't believe I will discover some overlooked connection between these two things. If the correlation is fresh in your mind, please come back and share. I would be interested to see how the rape and teleportation interacted. As I recall, the rape was purely out of revenge, nothing more.

OK, I will spell out this point. With the introduction of teleportation the problem is that no location that can be publicly accessed is safe. Physical barriers are not usable anymore. So more complex method are employed. The society decided that female protection is important. You can agree with that choice or not. It would be interesting for women to answer what their opinion would be of a world where someone could just port in on them and attack. Would they want more protection or more freedom. Bester's society decides that it wants protection. So the women of this world, especially the rich, are secreted away. And not we have a woman who finds this intolerable and fights against it. Does that fact that she does it subrosa make it less of an opposition? But certainly this conflict between the choice of society and the personal desires of a women are a major conflict in the book. You may not like the direction this conflict takes, but it is a central issue of the book.

But beyond this, I would need to go back and reread. I'm working from memory and so I must acknowledge that my recollection is not overly fresh. But I think I would remember if this rape were a driving engine to the overall theme, which Bester then was deliberately presenting to the reader.

On the rape. Note that it is never, in fact, describe. It is only hinted at. In fact Neil Gaiman's introduction comments on this.
"Were it written now, its author would have shown us the rape, not implied it, just as we would have been permitted to watch the sex on the grass in the night after the Goufre Martel, before the sun came up, and she saw his face…
Bester, Alfred (2011-06-05). The Stars My Destination (Kindle Locations 145-147). iPicturebooks. Kindle Edition. "
But where does this rape fit in the narrative. Clearly it has some central purpose because it is only implied and so could be removed with little change in the text.
It is as I said, Bester even emphasizes it in his intro. The placing of women in seraglios is a critical feature of this new society and a central driver of the plot of the book. Without it Olivia would not have set up the activity of the Vorga or it would have been more visible to the corporation and her father and hence more controllable.
The rape gives Bester two things, both of which he wants for his plot and story.
First it shows the depravity of Gully Foyle at this point; the complete lack of control he really has and how deeply angry and powerless he is. If, as they say, rape is mostly about power then this rape is showing how Foyle, lacking power, tries to obtain its surrogate. Foyle, as we know, will never reach his goals if he remains as he is.
Second, it provides motivation for Robin's subsequent actions. He needs a reason for the suicide attempt, the reluctance to join the Circus, and the final betrayal of Foyle. The rape provides a clear motivation for her actions.
This is a small book and Bester is a master of this length. I would guess that he has pared this down to the minimum needed to generate the story and the mood he sought . Every thing in a book at this length, like in a good short story, is necessary. There is not room for fluff.

And again, I must reiterate that this book is in my memory and as such, is subject to questionable clarity :)


I think Demolished Man holds up better though it is not as exciting a story.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Computer Connection (other topics)The Stars My Destination (other topics)
The Demolished Man (other topics)
The Stars My Destination (other topics)
The Stars My Destination (other topics)