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Encyclopedia > Galatea 2.2
Galatea 2.2

The cover of Galatea 2.2 incorporates the Raphael painting La fornarina.
Author Richard Powers
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Autobiographical novel
Publisher Harper Perennial
Publication date 1995
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)

Galatea 2.2 is a novel by Richard Powers. The novel is pseudo-autobiographical: the narrator is named Richard Powers and there is discussion of the four novels he wrote before Galatea 2.2 along with other references to his real biography. Richard Powers creates a version of himself for the novel that is not always flattering. It is not completely clear which specific events are true, and which are not, but it is clearly based on Powers' life. Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ... This article is about the Renaissance artist. ... The Portrait of a Young Woman (also known as La fornarina) is a painting by Italian High Renaissance master Raphael, between 1518 and 1520. ... Richard Powers (born June 18, 1957) is a novelist whose works explore the effects of modern science and technology. ... For other uses, see Country (disambiguation). ... The English language is a West Germanic language that originates in England. ... This Side Of Paradise by F. Scott Fitzgerald, a famous example of an autobiographical novel An autobiographical novel is a novel based on the life of the author. ... A publisher is a person or entity which engages in the act of publishing. ... HarperCollins is a publishing company owned by Rupert Murdochs News Corporation. ... Hardcover books A hardcover (or hardback or hardbound) is a book bound with rigid protective covers (typically of cardboard covered with cloth, heavy paper, or sometimes leather). ... To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article may require cleanup. ... Richard Powers (born June 18, 1957) is a novelist whose works explore the effects of modern science and technology. ...

Contents

Plot summary

The main narrative tells the story of Powers' return to his alma mater — referred to in the novel as simply "U.", but clearly based on the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, the school Powers attended and teaches at as a professor — after he has ended a long and torrid relationship with a loving but volatile woman, referred to as "C." Powers is an in-house author for the university, and lives for free for one year. He finds himself unable to write any more books, and spends the first portion of the novel attempting to write, but never getting past the first line. Alma mater is Latin for nourishing mother. It was used in ancient Rome as a title for the mother goddess, and in Medieval Christianity for the Virgin Mary. ... A Corner of Main Quad The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC, U of I, or simply Illinois), is the oldest, largest, and most prestigious campus in the University of Illinois system. ...


Powers then meets a computer scientist named Philip Lentz. Intrigued by Lentz's overbearing personality and unorthodox theories, Powers eventually agrees to participate in an experiment involving artificial intelligence. Lentz bets his fellow scientists that he can build a computer that can produce an analysis of a literary text that is indistinguishable from one produced by a human. It is Powers' task to "teach" the machine. After going through several unsuccessful versions, Powers and Lentz produce a computer model (dubbed "Helen") that is able to communicate like a human. It is not clear to the reader or to Powers whether she is simulating human thought, or whether she is actually experiencing it. Powers tutors the computer, first by reading it canonical works of literature, then current events, and eventually telling it the story of his own life, in the process developing a complicated relationship with the machine. AI redirects here. ... Helen of Troy redirects here. ... Canonical is an adjective derived from canon. ...


The novel also consists of extensive flashbacks to Powers' relationship with C., from their first meeting at U., to their bohemian life in Boston, to their move to C.'s family's town in the Netherlands. Bohemians are inhabitants of Bohemia, in the Czech Republic. ... Nickname: City on the Hill, Beantown, The Hub (of the Universe)1, Athens of America, The Cradle of Revolution, Puritan City, Americas Walking City Location in Massachusetts, USA Counties Suffolk County Mayor Thomas M. Menino(D) Area    - City 232. ...


The novel culminates with Helen being unable to bear the realities of the world, and "leaving" Powers. She asks Powers to "see to everything" for her, and subsequently shuts herself down. Her exit from the world forces Powers to experience a rebirth. In addition, Powers realizes that he was Lentz's experiment: would he or wouldn't he be able to teach a computer? Through the transformation he experiences, he is suddenly able to interact with the world, and more importantly he can write again.


Characters in "Galatea 2.2"

Richard Powers

The central character of Richard Powers within Galatea 2.2 shares certain traits and experiences with the author; they are both novelists, for example, and the character's books are the same as those of the actual, living writer. However, as within any work of fiction, the character is not and cannot be a replica of the author. The character, having attained his thirty-fifth birthday, has managed to achieve maturity without any sense of permanence or structure in his life. He cycles through his previous journeys without ever advancing forward, initially returning to U., the formative place of his youth, and later visiting once again ever foreign place in his past through the slides he shows the intelligent Helen. The character of Powers, through the progress of the book, must learn to stop filtering reality--through writing, reading, computers, even the image of a particular woman--and to actually experience it. "Life," Powers realizes in the final pages Galatea 2.2, "meant convincing another that you knew what it meant to be alive. The world's Turing Test was not yet over" (Powers 327). Powers is effectively reborn from his state of isolation and disconnection at the beginning of the work into a renewed awareness of his potential as a man--a participant in the world--and his ability to write, to transpose reality into fiction. Richard Powers (born June 18, 1957) is a novelist whose works explore the effects of modern science and technology. ... For other uses, see Fiction (disambiguation). ... For the Doctor Who novel named after the test, see The Turing Test (novel). ...

Lentz

Lentz is the brilliant researcher lodged in the Center, whose sarcasm and witty but pointed comments annoy and periodically wound his colleagues, including Richard. He is an odd melding of the scientific and literary worlds, for though he is a scientist, his wife introduced him to literature and reading. Lentz carries his personal tragedy with him as a constant shadow, for his once-brilliant wife suffered brain damage and must live in a care facility and now no longer recognizes him. His creation of Helen is, in part, an effort to explore the workings of the human brain, to somehow discover how a mere biological accident could so destroy the woman he loved.

Helen

Helen is the creation of Lentz and Richard; Lentz builds her, and Richard educates her. She is a net, spread out over innumerable computers, and she is taught using the literary canon. Only when she is exposed to reality--the murder, rage, etc. that characterize daily news and the human world--does she realize fully that she does not belong nor does she wish to belong in this world. Helen is the catalyst that begins Richard's regeneration. While Helen is not human, and does not possess a body, through Richard’s teachings she seems to have human-like characteristics. One of the central arguments of the book comes from Helen and whether she has human emotions, or is simply simulating human emotion. The Western canon is a canon of books and art, and specifically a set with very loose boundaries of books and other art, that has allegedly been highly influential in shaping Western culture. ... It has been suggested that this article or section be merged into Catalysis. ... Look up regeneration in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...

Diana

Diana, like Helen, teaches Richard a lesson. She has two sons, one a near-genius and one a Downs Syndrome child. Meeting that child, Richard recalls one of his former books, in which the female protagonist refuses to bear children for fear of birth defects. Chagrined, Richard views Diana with respect and admiration, but he does not fall in love with her. She is perhaps too real, too entirely founded in this world to easily attach herself to his illusions. In addition, Diana reminds Powers of the family unit, and what it means to belong to a family. It is another reminder of his lack of any real connections to the world before his rebirth at the end of the novel. A protagonist is the main figure of a piece of literature or drama and has the main part or role. ...

C.

C., known only by that initial, is the girl-woman who haunts Richard's memories. Their lengthy love affair defined a number of the years of Richard's life, but at the end Richard was not able to accept her as a real being. He gave her love and pretty sentences in his letters, but no real news. Both Powers and C. attempted to deal with worldly problems through books, which did not solve any of the problems they face. It is another manifestation of Powers’ lack of connection to the world. Manifestation refers to a concept of either recurring or transitive phenomena, as instances which become manifest or realised. ...

A.

Having permanently lost C., Richard re-envisions A. as a somewhat newer and better C. Meeting her in the halls of the English building, he falls in love with the graduate student, and proceeds to invite her into the very active halls of his imagination. He does not know her, but her image is enough. Richard is still dependent upon the illusion, upon the created sense of a thing, rather than upon the thing itself. A., who is never is love with nor even attracted to Richard, realizes this, and correctly terms him desperate. She is, however, Richard's ideal of the perfect teacher, and it is she who is pitted against Helen in the essay contest. Richard and A. never develop a relationship, although A. does becomes a teacher.


Galatea & the Pygmalion Myth

Powers' clearly uses the Pygmalion myth in this book. The relationship between the myth, that of Pygmalion and Galatea, and Powers' book is fairly clear. The humans--especially the characters of Powers and Lentz--stand in for Pygmalion, creating a modern Galatea who comes to obsess them. On one level, that of Lentz and eventually of Powers, the Galatea is analogous to Helen, the computer-net-artificial intelligence creation who forms a central part of the book. Created by man, the thinking net--Helen--does not complete the final stages of the Galatea / Pygmalion myth. She cannot bear the cruel reality of man's world, and by removing herself from it forces man--Powers--to become autonomous, disassociated with the fantasies and obsessions he has created. Pygmalion is a Greek name, probably going back to Phoenician roots. ...


For the character of Powers, however, there is another Galatea within the book--literature, and writing. Powers' books are themselves a different sort of Galatea. Created to fill a need, they become an obsession, and eventually a stand-in for the real world. When the book replaces the world, the character finds himself unable to write. It is only when Helen commands Richard Powers to "see to everything" for her that he is able to regenerate his creative powers and imagine himself writing again.


Reviews & Critiques

"Richard may have thought he was Pygmalion or Frankenstein, but he was as much Galatea as the AI. Indeed, he finally "comes to life" again at the end of the novel: once liberated from his stolen first sentence, he finds himself with an idea for a new novel--which, we suspect, is Galatea 2.2." - M. Burnstein, State University of New York, College at Brockport Pygmalion is a Greek name, probably going back to Phoenician roots. ... This article is about the 1818 novel. ...

"'Galatea 2.2' contains no extraneous material. Each character has a role to play, and each sheds light on the central ideas of tuition and stratas of linguistic uncertainty. An autistic child is less functional than the computer H., but is it of more 'value' as a living being? The laboratory monkeys cannot speak, but is lobotomising H., by cutting through her subsystems, crueller than dissecting the animals?" - Adam Baron, Spike Magazine

"If some of 'Galatea 2.2' feels closed and airless, much of it soars and spins. The sessions with Helen gain more and greater urgency; every new line on the graph of her expanding consciousness is also a stake through what seems to be, impossibly, her heart. "I want Richard to explain me," she laments."

"As Helen approaches her endgame-'I don't want to play anymore'-the various strands of "Galatea 2.2" come together, and the novel attains an aching, melancholy beauty." - Robert Cohen, New York Times

"In updating the Galatea legend, Mr. Powers has succeeded in writing his most satisfying novel yet: a cerebral thriller that's both intellectually engaging and emotionally compelling, a lively tour de force." - Michiko Kakutani, New York Times Wikipedia does not yet have an article with this exact name. ... Tour de Force is the sixth studio album by southern rock band . ...

"Richard Powers has staked out a unique place for himself, one that straddles our technological and our literary cultures. He may be the last humanist with a scientific competence, an invaluable thing when the notion that humans may be just another variety of complex system haunts our sense of ourselves."

"In its strongest moments, "Galatea 2.2" realizes the possibilities of that position splendidly. And with all of Richard Powers' autobiographical cards now so definitively on the table, I look forward to learning less about his self and/or meta-self and more in his next novel about the world in which we both must live." - Gerald Howard, The Nation

Awards & nominations

  • Finalist, 1995 National Book Critics Circle Award
  • Time Magazine Best Books of the Year, 1995
  • New York Times Notable Book, 1995

Publication History

• Galatea 2.2. NY: Farrar Straus & Giroux. London: Little, Brown / Abacus, 1995. Designed by Fritz Metsch; jacket design by Michael Ian Kaye. 329 p. (ISBN 0374199485)
• Galatea 2.2. 1st Harper Perennial ed. NY: HarperPerennial & HarperCollins Canada, Ltd, 1996. 336 p. (ISBN 0060976926.)
• Galatea 2.2. Books On Tape, 1996. Performed By Michael Kramer, Nine sound cassettes, 810 minutes, Single Reader, Full Length. (ISBN 0736633499)
• Galatea 2.2. London: Abacus, 1996. 329 p. (ISBN 0349107718 (pbk) .)
• Galatea 2.2. Netherlands: Uitgeverij Contact, 1997. 365 p. (ISBN 9025406203) Translation into Dutch by Niek Miedema and Harm Damsma. Cover design: Jos Peters; cover photo: Zefa.
• Galatea 2.2. Germany: Amann Verlag, 1997. Jacket design by Wolfsfeld Design Factory. Translation into German.
• Galatea 2.2. France: Editions du Seuil, 1997 Translation into French
• Galatea 2.2. Barcelona: Mondadori, 1997. 370 p. (ISBN 8439701454) Translation into Spanish by Cristóbal Pera. Design: Graficas Huertas, S.A
• Galatea 2.2. Galatea 2.2. Frankfurt: Fischer Taschenbuch Verlag, 2000. 459 p. (ISBN 3596142768) Translation into German by Werner Schmitz.
• Galatea 2.2. Tokyo: Misuzu Shobo, 2001. 403 p. (ISBN 4622048183)
• Galatea 2.2. Roma: Fanucci, 2003.393 p. (ISBN 88-347-0929-2) Translation into Italian by Luca Briasco.
• Forthcoming editions in French (Editions du Seuil); Hebrew (Am Oved); Portuguese (Nova Fronteira)


See also

Pygmalion and Galatea (1890) by Jean-Léon Gérôme (1824-1904) Galatea (she who is milk-white)[1] was the name of three figures in Greek mythology, the best-known being the wife of Pygmalion. ...

External links

Sources



 
 

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