At some
point in time it’s natural for a person, most likely during adolescence, to
look around at their family and ask: “How’d
I get mixed up with this bunch?” Genetics not automatically leading to
harmonious relationships, there is indeed something deeper in humanity that
allows people to get along with some better than others, regardless of
blood. Creating a new social order,
Robert Charles Wilson’s simple but effective The Affinities (2015) works with this seeming paradox, ideas
ricocheting around the mind, throughout.
Redefining
the term ‘family,’ The Affinities
works from the premise that a new social algorithm allows a good chunk of
humanity to be categorized into affinities—not groups of similar personality,
rather diverse, poly-compatible groups that have a good chance at “successful social engagements.” Wilson’s sociologist in the novel locating “the boundary
between consciousness and culture,”
holistic collaboration becomes the key.
Twenty-two different affinities are identified, of which 60% of the population
fits comfortably within one or another. Entrance
is determined by the person’s ability to suit an underlying formula for group
holism, new social divisions develop and grow across North America as people come
to appreciate the affinities ability to give them a true sense of family, and
all the incumbent advantages.
And it’s a
fascinating concept. Original science
fiction (in an age when it is so difficult to be original), The Affinities is proof that sometimes
the simplest ideas are best. By redrawing demographics along lines of sub-conscious,
Wilson creates a new way for things like cooperation and discrimination,
nepotism and friendship, social inclusion and exclusion to viewed as they never
have before.
Adam Fisk
is an art student at odds to make ends meet.
Unwilling to follow in his father’s footsteps like his older brother
Aaron, he’s never quite fit in with his family, and as a result has to fend
hard for himself. Taking InterAlia’s
affinity test, however, changes his life.
Part of the 60% of people who can be categorized, he finds himself the
newest member of the Tau affinity. And
his luck quickly changes. The Taus
giving him every opportunity to succeed, where he was jobless, he is soon
putting to use his talents for an advertizing company owned by another
Tau. Where he was relatively friendless,
he now has a community of people in both his city and beyond to connect with on
a daily basis. And where his love life
was unstable and uncertain, he encounters women he can trust and begins to
build stronger, less equivocal relationships.
But the affinities are not as trouble-free as they seem. Rivalries heating up as more and more people
are shuffled into affinities and problems within InterAlia appear, the new
social order soon rubs shoulders with the very political structure that was
thought to bind our society together.
Sparks, as they say, fly.
Tom
Shippey titled his review of The
Affinities: “Who needs a state, once
we have perfectly sorted social networks?” And indeed this statement
captures the overriding tension of the novel.
As with every Wilson tale, the story is firmly based on its
characters. Fisk, his family, and his
fellow Tau members are the well from which the story springs. But affecting all are the social changes the
affinities bring about. Fisk’s
individual story is slightly larger than life, but the path he weaves through
the “para-ethnicities and meta-nations” presents an intriguing revisioning of North
American society, and for this, is as humane an examination of socio-politics
as any sf novel might be.
Challenging
social dynamics for better and worse, The
Affinities asks: is family the group you function best within, or the group
you are born into? It examines humanity’s penchant for mentally creating Us and
Them, including the underlying partiality and fear. And perhaps above all, it questions: are the
social constructs we are familiar with fact or fiction? Like China Mieville’s The City & the City, The
Affinities looks at the walls, visible and invisible, we erect between
ourselves, looking to see what they are built upon. To his credit, Wilson wondrously sets the
stage, then leaves it up to the reader to determine what, in fact, is viable.
In the
end, The Affinities goes beyond
hyperbole to be a truly interesting and thought-provoking novel on the manner
in which humanity treats and views its social structures. Facebook3, Wilson utilizes a
simple social networking experiment to examine society from an angle available
only to science fiction (and perhaps Philip Zimbardo). Recreating the idea of person’s ‘family’ or
‘group’ based on social algorithms, it may indeed have the reader asking the
question: “How did I get mixed up with
this bunch?” And as ever, as Paul Di Filippo points in his review, Wilson eschews "glitz and trendiness for a kind of bedrock science fiction that
earns its eternal classicism by embodying human values and concerns as
old as the species, no matter what futuristic trappings they wear." Smoothly written as well, like
the prose of one of the Bobs (Heinlein or Silverberg), it has me looking ahead
to 2015’s best.
Just ordered from the library! I'm a big fan of self-selected social groups, so we'll see what this book makes me think...
ReplyDeleteGreat, hope you find it as thought-provoking as I did!
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