The Glass Bees (nonfiction): Difference between revisions
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'''''The Glass Bees''''' (German: '''Gläserne Bienen''') is a 1957 science fiction novel written by German author [[Ernst Jünger (nonfiction)|Ernst Jünger]]. | [[File:Gläserne_Bienen.jpg|thumb|Gläserne Bienen.]]'''''The Glass Bees''''' (German: '''Gläserne Bienen''') is a 1957 science fiction novel written by German author [[Ernst Jünger (nonfiction)|Ernst Jünger]]. | ||
The novel follows two days in the life of Captain Richard, an unemployed ex-cavalryman who feels lost in a world that has become more technologically advanced and impersonal. Richard accepts a job interview at Zapparoni Works, a company that designs and manufactures robots including the titular glass bees. Richard's first-person narrative blends depiction of his unusual job interview, autobiographical flashbacks from his childhood and his days as a soldier, and reflection on the themes of technology, war, historical change, and morality. | The novel follows two days in the life of Captain Richard, an unemployed ex-cavalryman who feels lost in a world that has become more technologically advanced and impersonal. Richard accepts a job interview at Zapparoni Works, a company that designs and manufactures robots including the titular glass bees. Richard's first-person narrative blends depiction of his unusual job interview, autobiographical flashbacks from his childhood and his days as a soldier, and reflection on the themes of technology, war, historical change, and morality. | ||
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* [[Ernst Jünger (nonfiction)]] | * [[Ernst Jünger (nonfiction)]] | ||
External links | == External links == | ||
* [ Post] @ Twitter (29 April 2021) | |||
* ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Glass_Bees The Glass Bees]'' @ Wikipedia | * ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Glass_Bees The Glass Bees]'' @ Wikipedia | ||
Revision as of 05:08, 29 April 2021
The Glass Bees (German: Gläserne Bienen) is a 1957 science fiction novel written by German author Ernst Jünger.
The novel follows two days in the life of Captain Richard, an unemployed ex-cavalryman who feels lost in a world that has become more technologically advanced and impersonal. Richard accepts a job interview at Zapparoni Works, a company that designs and manufactures robots including the titular glass bees. Richard's first-person narrative blends depiction of his unusual job interview, autobiographical flashbacks from his childhood and his days as a soldier, and reflection on the themes of technology, war, historical change, and morality.
In recent years, Jünger's prognostications on the future of technology, variously interpreted as technophobic allegory or insightful critique into the altered relationship between technology, nature, and the human, have received renewed enthusiasm.
American science fiction writer Bruce Sterling composed an introduction for the New York Review Books edition in 2000, saying that "its speculations on technology and industry are so prescient as to be uncanny."
In the News
Fiction cross-reference
Nonfiction cross-reference
External links
- [ Post] @ Twitter (29 April 2021)
- The Glass Bees @ Wikipedia