Subject: doctorlit reviews Contact by Carl Sagan (spoilers)
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Posted on: 2019-02-04 03:03:00 UTC

(Just adding this to an existing review thread so I don't bump all the new threads that went up in the last twenty-four hours. Hope you don't mind, World-Jumper!)

I remember for certain I watched the film adaptation of this back in high school AP Biology. I don’t remember why we watched it in a biology class, and I also don’t remember, uh, nearly anything from the movie. But when I saw a battered copy of Contact in a Goodwill, I decided it was time to add it to my list of known canons.

Spoilers for Contact.

I actually don’t know a whole lot about Carl Sagan beyond “scientist” and “writer.” From my perspective reading Contact in the 2010s, it feels like an alternate history, though of course, it was a speculative future when Sagan published it in 1985. And as a result . . . well, I feel sad that neither U.S. nor global culture has lived up to Sagan’s vision. Sagan presents a world with the U.S. has finally elected a woman to the presidency, where nuclear weapons are being scaled back, where space flight and exploration are becoming more and more commonplace, where the human species is becoming more of an identity than any national identity. It makes me feel like I’m living in the more backwards Earth. I hope things get closer to Sagan’s vision during my lifetime, but right now, I’m a bit pessimistic about the motivating power of human selfishness and fear.

I’m having trouble ordering my thoughts about the idea of our species meeting a sentient one from another planet. Given my very Kingdom Hearts- and PPC-inspired outlook on life, I would personally love for our cultures to meet another and start to see a very different and unique outlook on life. But I’m not sure our species is ready for that; we’re not very good at accepting each other yet, so I feel like the encounter with an entire new species is just going to lead to a whole new variety of racism. And depending on the beliefs and culture of the other new species, that may get us involved in a conflict we don’t have any way of surviving.

Mmm. I guess this isn’t much of a review, but I’m struggling to fins more to say. Anyone else have thoughts on this novel, or its movie?

—doctorlit, being mopey about culture

“Except only for a nearby supernova remnant in Cassiopeia, it was the brightest spoiler source in the skies of Earth.” “Except only for a nearby supernova remnant in Cassiopeia, it was the brightest spoiler source in the skies of Earth.”

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