Tuesday, 19 November 2013

Introduction to The Price of Man - pre-release

The concept of ‘The Price of Man’ came about as an idea for a prequel to the Star Series, the story of a girl living in a young Port Homeland as humankind leaves en masse for the New World and those left behind make what they can of life here on Earth. Chronologically the story is set much closer to the present day than originally intended, long before the founding of Port Homeland. As my awareness of Starhawk’s environmental and political movements increased, and as my involvement in student politics became a large part of my life, the emphasis for the novel shifted towards the grave economic, environmental and social issues faced by those who stay behind on Earth.
The first chapter, ‘Songs after midnight’, began entirely as a dream and started as an independent short story. It came to me during Price of Man’s very early development and I figured it fit in well with the back story of mankind leaving Earth for life in the stars, but uncertain of what they’ll find or what sort of life they’ll have. It very much plays on human fear of death or the unknown, starting a new life somewhere new and uncharted, and the story subtly blends both of these themes. The original plan for the opening of the story showed the excitement of the US space race, followed by the horror of the Challenger disaster (which did feature in the dream very prominently), but then remedied by the fact that exploration still continued (if not by the crew of Challenger – I took this as a metaphor for both the successes and dangers of space exploration.) Note also that ‘The Final Countdown’, the opening scene that depicts the above, came out early in 1986, the same time of the same year as the Challenger disaster. This occurred in the story by freak coincidence and I was blown away when I first noticed it.
The second chapter, Times of Hope and Chaos, was also based on a dream I had a few weeks after the first, and also initially intended to be an independent short story. The name came from a workshop ran by Starhawk, one of the main influences of the story, I attended in Glastonbury in May 2013, the bulk of which explored the environmental and political catastrophes we face and how to build successful, cooperative communities out of it. This second dream added a new layer to the story, presented to me in two parts; the first a woman and her children escaping from natural disaster, and the second part a man fleeing political persecution. I was able to incorporate this easily into my story and thus created the characters of Sam, Maggie and Lucas, the running back-story to Gloria’s main narrative, characters who didn’t feature at all in initial plans before the dream.
The quotes that are interspersed between chapters are from famous writers, political and religious leaders whose words I find inspiring and relevant to the message of the story. Each quote is meant to relate to the chapter it precedes, and sometimes it supports the behaviour and words of the characters within it, sometimes it goes against it. Either way, the quotes, like the rest of the book, is intended to present many different viewpoints to many different arguments. I hadn’t expected Martin Luther King Jr., a Christian and avid pacifist, to be the main advocate for the message of the story in these quotes, for a world where Christianity and organised religion have been largely abandoned for atheism and spirituality, and violence becomes seemingly the only option for uprising or even for defence. Martin Luther King Jr., though, envisioned an America free from racism, from war, from poverty and segregation and for all mankind to walk together as brothers and sisters, using his faith as his vehicle to spread the word of love and brotherhood.
As a work originating in MTS, the story draws heavily on music, more so than was originally intended for this book. The main musical influences were the ideologies of rebellion, anarchy and awareness of political corruption and social control from Green Day, and the sombre sense of hopelessness in a time of war, loneliness and loss of Brandon Flower’s solo album ‘Flamingo.’ Here the war is more metaphorical but carries with it frequent imagery of battle and loss in war.
As unreliable as Wikipedia may seem, it was an invaluable source of information for research on different political ideologies and economic systems, geographical information about the south-western states and cultural information about the US (for a US citizen, I was surprised by how much I didn’t know! (even though I’ve never lived there.)) Most of the ideas about permaculture and an alternative, earth-based, community-based lifestyle I drew from Starhawk’s non-fiction ‘The Earth Path’ and fiction ‘The Fifth Sacred Thing.’
The theme of the ‘Promised Land’ prevailed through many of the song lyrics and through Martin Luther King Jr.’s speeches. It’s presented many different ways, initially as the place of escape where only the richest can reach, somewhere barely imaginable for those left behind; as the story progresses, it becomes a vision of a hidden paradise here on Earth for young, idealistic Gloria, and for Sam it becomes a metaphor for the world after the revolution has been won. Like many themes of the story it’s left largely open ended until the very end, as it means different things to different people. Everyone Gloria encounters on her journey sees and interprets the world in different ways, to the point that she loses her firm sense of the world’s problems and how they should be dealt with, and a new worldview is built on what she’s seen and experienced.

The ‘end of days’ is something that’s represented in popular culture as a looming apocalypse over mankind for our various wrongdoings, religious, financial, social, environmental, economic in nature. ‘The Price of Man’ shows many of these financial collapses, social breakdown and natural disasters take place, with many more threatened at every turn. The title is intended not only to refer to the price paid for mankind’s love of and obsession with money, but also the impact that wrong decisions made now have on our future in terms of environmental awareness and social structure. I’ve chosen the ending I have not to dictate how I think everyone in the future should live – it’s not a path for everyone. Starhawk’s work can be controversial and often unpopular, but it’s a path I would choose for myself given the availability of the right community and infrastructure. Here I present it as a possible solution, one of many, and one that I hope will inspire others to consider this difficult to achieve yet wholly fulfilling lifestyle. Many of my themes and ideas represented will be controversial and raise debate, but precisely because these things are impossible to ignore! Enjoy, my friends. x

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