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245

The Masque of the Red Death

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terms
7
notes

Doctorow, C. (2019). The Masque of the Red Death. In Doctorow, C. Radicalized. Head of Zeus, pp. 245-303

249

Martin knew that The Event was coming. The fact was the world just didn't need all those people anymore, and the market had revealed that fact, squeezing them into tinier, more uncomfortable places. He wouldn't tolerate it if he was in their shoes. He'd be the first one to build a guillotine [...]

I like the way this is written in free indirect style from the POV of a character whose political views/morals are the complete opposite of Doctorow's, but who recognises the same facts. basically a right-wing marxist. clever narrative tool!

—p.249 by Cory Doctorow 4 years, 11 months ago

Martin knew that The Event was coming. The fact was the world just didn't need all those people anymore, and the market had revealed that fact, squeezing them into tinier, more uncomfortable places. He wouldn't tolerate it if he was in their shoes. He'd be the first one to build a guillotine [...]

I like the way this is written in free indirect style from the POV of a character whose political views/morals are the complete opposite of Doctorow's, but who recognises the same facts. basically a right-wing marxist. clever narrative tool!

—p.249 by Cory Doctorow 4 years, 11 months ago
251

[...] the semi-employed, semi-employable dimbulbs who lucked into a prime piece of location would soon find themselves gently ushered to a place that was better matched with their worth to society and the human race.

[...] the smartest and best had figured out how to improve even the most marginal assets, well beyond the capacity of the 99 percent, and now the 99 percent had found themselves relieved of all their worldly goods and lacking the sums to rent anywhere to perch while they waited to die.

Martin describes this earlier on as being akin to large-scale gentrification

—p.251 by Cory Doctorow 4 years, 11 months ago

[...] the semi-employed, semi-employable dimbulbs who lucked into a prime piece of location would soon find themselves gently ushered to a place that was better matched with their worth to society and the human race.

[...] the smartest and best had figured out how to improve even the most marginal assets, well beyond the capacity of the 99 percent, and now the 99 percent had found themselves relieved of all their worldly goods and lacking the sums to rent anywhere to perch while they waited to die.

Martin describes this earlier on as being akin to large-scale gentrification

—p.251 by Cory Doctorow 4 years, 11 months ago
267

[...] Martin didn't let himself feel empathy for her. It was the grasshopper and the ants: he'd done all the work to make himself a cozy shelter from the blowing winter and she had done whatever she'd done instead---made a bunch of babies, watched reality TV, taken drugs, or crocheted. People who didn't think ahead were self-correcting problems. She was correcting herself, and it wasn't pretty, but it wasn't his problem, either.

(the aunt, with cholera)

(the ending is great if a little too heavy-handed cus Martin basically dies from the same thing while she lives)

I STUDIED THE BLADE

—p.267 by Cory Doctorow 4 years, 11 months ago

[...] Martin didn't let himself feel empathy for her. It was the grasshopper and the ants: he'd done all the work to make himself a cozy shelter from the blowing winter and she had done whatever she'd done instead---made a bunch of babies, watched reality TV, taken drugs, or crocheted. People who didn't think ahead were self-correcting problems. She was correcting herself, and it wasn't pretty, but it wasn't his problem, either.

(the aunt, with cholera)

(the ending is great if a little too heavy-handed cus Martin basically dies from the same thing while she lives)

I STUDIED THE BLADE

—p.267 by Cory Doctorow 4 years, 11 months ago
273

[...] Martin couldn't help but brag that each of those little shot glasses held $100 worth of liquor at pre-collapse prices. Who knew what it would fetch in the marketplaces of the new world when it emerged? [...]

haha this reminds me of the man in the high castle, Robert trying to get a piece of the statue of liberty

—p.273 by Cory Doctorow 4 years, 11 months ago

[...] Martin couldn't help but brag that each of those little shot glasses held $100 worth of liquor at pre-collapse prices. Who knew what it would fetch in the marketplaces of the new world when it emerged? [...]

haha this reminds me of the man in the high castle, Robert trying to get a piece of the statue of liberty

—p.273 by Cory Doctorow 4 years, 11 months ago
285

[...] the people there were willing to trade eggs and cheese for gemstones. Martin loved that: he had a lot of gemstones stockpiled, and in the wee hours of the night he wondered if he was kidding himself about whether anyone would want them. You can't eat gems, and converting them to useful goods required something like a functioning civilization. The fact that these stoic Latino farmers were willing to take a little bag of rubies and sapphires for five big wheels of cheese and a promise of four dozen eggs per week for the next month meant that they, too, thought that civilization would come back.

—p.285 by Cory Doctorow 4 years, 11 months ago

[...] the people there were willing to trade eggs and cheese for gemstones. Martin loved that: he had a lot of gemstones stockpiled, and in the wee hours of the night he wondered if he was kidding himself about whether anyone would want them. You can't eat gems, and converting them to useful goods required something like a functioning civilization. The fact that these stoic Latino farmers were willing to take a little bag of rubies and sapphires for five big wheels of cheese and a promise of four dozen eggs per week for the next month meant that they, too, thought that civilization would come back.

—p.285 by Cory Doctorow 4 years, 11 months ago
286

Civilizations had risen and fallen before. Humanity needed to work together, but hell was other people. When the best people were on top, things worked: they convinced the rational, cajoled the stubborn, and, frankly, forced the rest. It was for the greater good. Put one of the losers, the takers, at the top of the pile, and they'd lead the rest into catastrophe. [...]

isn't this tautological though? the "best" are the ones who are able to keep this system of hierarchy working, not the ones who are "the best" by a rational external metric

—p.286 by Cory Doctorow 4 years, 11 months ago

Civilizations had risen and fallen before. Humanity needed to work together, but hell was other people. When the best people were on top, things worked: they convinced the rational, cajoled the stubborn, and, frankly, forced the rest. It was for the greater good. Put one of the losers, the takers, at the top of the pile, and they'd lead the rest into catastrophe. [...]

isn't this tautological though? the "best" are the ones who are able to keep this system of hierarchy working, not the ones who are "the best" by a rational external metric

—p.286 by Cory Doctorow 4 years, 11 months ago
290

[...] Martin was glad that gemstones were still acceptable trade goods. He looked forward to the day when he could get his thumb drives out of his floor safe and start mobilizing his cryptocurrency assets again.

he's basically just Childan from High Castle lmao. brain so broken by capitalism

—p.290 by Cory Doctorow 4 years, 11 months ago

[...] Martin was glad that gemstones were still acceptable trade goods. He looked forward to the day when he could get his thumb drives out of his floor safe and start mobilizing his cryptocurrency assets again.

he's basically just Childan from High Castle lmao. brain so broken by capitalism

—p.290 by Cory Doctorow 4 years, 11 months ago

(noun) a building or chamber in which bodies or bones are deposited

298

Fort Doom was a charnel house.

—p.298 by Cory Doctorow
notable
4 years, 11 months ago

Fort Doom was a charnel house.

—p.298 by Cory Doctorow
notable
4 years, 11 months ago