The Machine Stops

Has anybody else come across this unusual short story by EM Forster, originally published in a university magazine in 1909? I think it’s Forster’s only foray into science fiction: a dystopian story set in a world where the middle classes live underground, their every want serviced by ‘The Machine’; until it breaks down, and they’re left to their own devices. The heroine (an obese woman) has to crawl to the surface, where she comes across the plebs who have been keeping the machine running for all these years, but no longer. I’ve forgotten what the outcome is.

You can see the contemporary social and political message behind this little fable (Forster was quite left-wing); but I’ve been experiencing it more literally over the past week or so. My internet connection has broken down. I can no longer receive or send emails, and was parted from my blogsite, until I found a devious way around that half an hour ago: hence this post, which I hope gets through. Apple have a ‘genius desk’ in another suburb of Stockholm, but the snow is so thick here that it’s difficult, even dangerous, to drive there. I’ve phoned everywhere else – in Britain as well as Sweden; but with no joy.

Hence my silence on the major event of the last few days, Trump’s invasion of Venezuela; which as the author of a book on historical American ‘imperialism’ I might be expected to have a view on, but haven’t been able to communicate it until now. I need one of the plebs – young men and women, schooled in these mysteries – to come down and help me. Otherwise I feel like the fat woman in the story.

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About bernardporter2013

Retired academic, author, historian.
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2 Responses to The Machine Stops

  1. jfkyachts's avatar jfkyachts says:

    Dear Bernard, Yes, indeed….it was on the Reading List for “European Literature” (Russian) at UEA…..as it slotted into the the HG Wells, Evgeny Zamyatin (We) and Brave New World….sequence and then 1984……. I can remember the TV series that prompted it too in the early 1960’s…..pre-Daleks! John

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  2. I read it earlier in the day. Very far-sighted. In the end all the humans die. The earth’s atmosphere has been contaminated forcing everyone to live underground. The scenario is interesting, though the narrative not so much. Forster is prescient in that we are becoming profoundly dependent on ‘the machine’ and if it – the whole interconnected digitised system – gives out, chaos will ensue. Here in Australia, to take one example, it is predicted that cash will be gone by 2030. What happens when its replacement, e-money, goes down indefinitely? Hope your internet connection gets restored quickly. I will be interested in your view of Trump’s foray.

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