The Peace War by Vernor Vinge (1984)

The idea that the disappearance or removal of all technology and nuclear weapons might be the only way to save the human race is not new to science fiction. Clifford D. Simak made exploring the pros and cons of this scenario the center of many of his works, including the great City. Vernor Vinge, another decorated author, is more known for his far future Hugo winning space operas than post-Cold War dystopias. In The Peace War, however, written in 1984, a time when President Regan built up the US army as the USSR began to collapse under the strain of rot from within, Vinge’s near-future exploration of technology, morals, and war proved compelling enough to garner him a Hugo nomination.

The Peace War is the first in a string of nominees that I will be reading in place of the actual Hugo winners from their year. Why I’m skipping certain books varies on a case by case basis, and that doesn’t mean they won’t pop up later in the project. In this case I’m choosing to ignore William Gibson’s Neuromancer. Skip down to the end of the review for my explanation of why.

I’ll be forthright when I say that I love Vinge’s Hugo winners, A Fire Upon the Deep and A Deepness in the Sky, and I look forward to reading Vinge’s other near-future winner, Rainbows End. At his best, Vinge is a modern master, blending hard sci-fi and far future plots to create incredible universes that leave the reader both convinced and in awe. His books are also quite riveting page turners, and I generally tend to dislike books overly driven by plot. But no, in Vinge’s universes the reader is treated to vivid and surprising characters that are just as alive and captivating as his harrowing plots.

The Peace War is interesting, but it is certainly not Vinge at his best. It is mired in Cold War not-so-sub-text, set in a world in which the Peacers have disabled every nuclear and military complex and weapon on earth, bringing “peace” to a world teetering on the brink of catastrophic, violent collapse. The Peacers, are not a governmental body but a private corporation who created a technique called bobbling. Using this technique the Peacers surrounded all military weapons and installations in impenetrable silver spheres – referred to as bobbles – therefore incapacitating all world governments by rendering their armies useless.

But in this new, demilitarized world, the Peacers are the enemies. Disallowing not only military but other forms of advanced technology that might lead to military development, the Peacers have plunged the world back into what Vinge repeatedly refers to as a feudal society, though Vinge only gives us glimpses of a ravaged Southern California ruled by what might be some sort of feudal government. Mostly the world seems to be populated with gangs, tribes, traders, and our heroes, the Tinkers: men and women who continue to develop advanced technology. Hiding from the Peacers, they hope to one day overthrow the authoritarian entity and let the United States flourish again.

There are a lot of things going on in The Peace War, most of them very thinly fleshed out in favor of advancing action, a weakness that Vinge put aside in later works. One reason dystopias are so captivating is because of the world building that occurs in such familiar places. The disaster has already happened – what does like look like for the surivors? Literally, what does it looks like? These questions, and Vinge’s world invites many of them, go largely unanswered.

On the micro level, Vinge is obviously trying to explore the way race and social status would be constructed following such a catastrophe. The main character, Wili, is black, something that Vinge reminds us of over and over again, especially every time he is introduced to new characters. But the meaning of this blackness is unclear; several times Vinge alludes or states that other characters might be surprised to take orders from Wili or to learn that he is a genius, but why this characterization in relation to Wili’s blackness is so important is made unclear. No racial tension is ever actively demonstrated. Interestingly, Vinge again alludes that Southern California is no longer angelo, but boosts a majority Spanish population, though in the caste system is still seems English speakers are on top. Confusion abounds. Does this mean whites are still in control here? Is there a difference between language and race? Wili grew up in Southern California but is fluidly bilingual, further compounding this problem. Then there are groups of people that are only referred to by made-up tribal names. Wili is always black in relation to them while their own racial identities remain unclear.

This issue of Wili’s blackness is worth bringing up because Vinge makes it such a glaring point of description but refuses or overlooks explaining to the reader how race works in this dystopic society. His oversight is really a shame, as dystopias provide an interesting setting to explore social constructs like race. Though Vinge seemed to sense these possibilities, his novel is much more interested in exploring the technological marvels he creates in the form of the bobbles and cerebrally interactive computer networks than how humans might interact following a devastating event.

His strange half-exploration of post-apocalyptic social constructs extends to women as well. The antagonist of the novel, Della Lu, is an Asian woman. Her race is mentioned as constantly as Wili’s, with just as little exploration of what that racial identity means to Lu, and to the other characters she reacts with. A bit more fleshed out is her characterization as a woman. Like with Wili, Lu is constantly aware that all the men around her are surprised and resentful that they must take orders for a woman, even though she is more competent than they are. Unlike Wili, Lu at times even has to listen to men denigrate her femaleness, whereas Wili’s blackness if never openly addressed.

Lu isn’t very sympathetic, she’s through and through a killer, bent on destroying the Tinkers because, well, who knows why, really. It seems every story needs and enemy. At one point she has sex with Mike Rosas, a Tinker turned turncoat turned Tinker again, only for the reason that she is trying to shut him up. The sexual encounter sticks out like a sore thumb in the context of the novel, as if Vinge threw it in there simply to spice up the narrative. Women in this book are always sexual objects, including Jill, a computer program created to resemble lead Tinker Paul Hohler’s lost love. Vinge also assumes that a return to the “feudal” structure (a word I’m not sure he even understands) automatically means a return to extremely restricted gender roles – all the peripheral female characters are expected to be domestic and silent. This is a post-feminist novel written during the rise of the New Right, perhaps grasping at the disintegrated domestic ideal. Women can have agency, but in the case of Lu, if they step outside the domestic norm they are heartless bitches who use their bodies to manipulate men and are punished for their sins by death. A familiar trope. Vinge does allow one female character, Allison, to have agency, even though she takes on a non-masculine role in the storyline. Allison, however, has literally been objectified by Paul Hohler, who created the computer program Jill in her image.

Overall The Peace War’s most interesting contribution to the field is its examination of Cold War tensions through a dystopic lens. On a geopolitical level, the three remaining powers in the novel are France, China, and America (all under control of the Peacers), with nary a mention of the USSR. This trio of powers is a wonderful imagining of what might have grown from the alliance made between the French and the Chinese. In 1984 the Soviet Union was collapsing, and in The Peace War there’s nothing left of it. Instead, the unstoppable behemoth, China; France, the rebel of Europe; and the USA have taken over control of most of the world. Interestingly, Africa, always a problem for the first world, remains largely uncontrolled, though it lacks the technological resources of Tinkers elsewhere in the world and is therefore not as much of a threat of Peacer technology. Vinge created a fascinating reading of contemporary geopolitical structures in his dystopic future, and this is yet another point of interest that it would have enriched the novel if only it had been fleshed out.

A product of the 1980s, in The Peace War, Vinge explores a lot of familiar technology, like sophisticated spy satellites and computer networks that looks suspiciously like the internet. The book also reveals that fears of nuclear war and the escalating development of technology didn’t die with détente – they continued to suffuse people’s lives and minds, driving their actions and influencing their fears. The Peace War doesn’t find peace in removing technology. As the title of the novel suggests, the attempt to remove technology simply led to a war to bring it back, almost leading us again to the conclusion that violence is inherent to Man. Vinge’s characters believe that peace is possible, but only if technology is used correctly, and is put in the right hands. What “correct” use is and whose hands should be in control remains unexplained, along with most of the dystopic world Vinge created.

 * * *

During the course of this project I will skipping at least a few of the actual award winners, each for varying reasons. In the interests of fair play, I’ll try to explain why I’m skipping each one. This year’s winner that I’ve chosen to exclude was Neuromancer, by William Gibson. I know that Neuromancer is considered one of the game changers of modern science fiction, that it is much, if not obsessively beloved. The thing is I don’t like it. I’ve tried to get through it many times and never once have I been able to finish it. I find it to be dense, boring, and unreadable. To be fair, I am not a fan of cyberpunk in general. Also, I have actually read quite a lot of William Gibson’s work. I didn’t like any of those books either. While less dense than Neuromancer, I found his plots to be repetitive and all of his endings to be terribly anti-climactic, so much so that they ruined the premise of each book that I read – and some of them had really good premises! Those disappointments combined with my inability to make it through Neuromancer even once left me feeling rather disinclined to try reading it again, especially since I’m doing this project for fun. I’m sure there are many really wonderful places both online and in print that you can go to read about how great or shitty Neuromancer is. For now this won’t be one of them.

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08 2012

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  1. 1

    It’s been ages since I’ve read The Peace War, but I re-read A Fire… and A Deepness… once a year or so on average; they’re pretty much the only books I’ve re-read nearly so much, but I find them riveting each time. (However I only made it about a third of the way through The Children of the Sky before getting distracted and jumping into a months-long [so far] non-fiction kick.)

    Anyway, I love the deep analysis and look forward to more.

    • Claire #
      2

      Hey, thanks for the comments! I loved Fire as well, and found Deepness to be great, if not quite as good as Fire. I haven’t even bothered to try The Children of the Sky – my instincts have warned me away and I just don’t want anything to tarnish those first two great books. Hopefully I can do as good a job of reviewing them as he did writing them.

  2. Cosmo #
    3

    “One reason dystopias are so captivating is because of the world building that occurs in such familiar places. The disaster has already happened – what does like look like for the surivors? Literally, what does it looks like? These questions, and Vinge’s world invites many of them, go largely unanswered.”
    Vinge’s narrative isn’t about exploring the dyspotia, it’s about how it’s overcome. His dystopia is authoritarian and he expores it from two different directions. Top down and bottom up. From the top you have the Peace Authority controlling technology but not influencincing local events beyond that. The result of this is bottem up authority; the tribalism, fuedalism you mentioned. All the main characters have bucked their expected roles and exceeded.
    Naismaith the nerd survives a brutal world, Wili the weak underdog becomes the champion, Della Lu the woman excels in a male driven authoritarian world and then overcomes that. Mike overcomes his hatred of bio-tech. There is even hints at the end that the AI Jill even overcomes her artificiality and becomes an individual.

    “On the micro level, Vinge is obviously trying to explore the way race and social status would be constructed following such a catastrophe.”
    Yes, but only to contrast how individuals can transcend the confines of group identity.

    • Claire #
      4

      Hey, thanks for commenting!

      In response to your first comment, I don’t think those two things are mutually exclusive. Perhaps my reading of The Peace War is colored by the richness of Fire and Deepness, where everything is thoroughly fleshed out and explored even while the plot is driven forward at a breath-taking pace. My problem with The Peace War is that I felt everything in the book was thinly explored – it was heavily driven by plot and very little by detail. Vinge didn’t spend as much time “world building” as he should have. Just as he only hovers over the landscape – and when one of your major plot point is giant, impenetrable silver bubbles that can drastically alter the landscape, I think they deserve a little more attention – he also only hovers over the details of the society(s) that have formed in the wake of the catastrophe. He constantly tells, and more rarely shows. This failure to spend time with the society he builds, from both the top down and the bottom up, really weakens the novel in my opinion. Yes, we eventually figure out how things work, but there’s such rich material and so little time spent on developing it. That extra time and inventiveness or richness of detail would have kicked this book up another level.

      I also disagree that all the main characters have bucked their expected roles, though that might depend on the kind of expectation we’re defining. I’d take issue with Della Lu most specifically, as I found her character to be disappointingly stereotypical. Also, as I mentioned in the review (and will reiterate below), Vinge’s failure to really flesh out his world doesn’t give us much to contrast our characters against.

      And, as to your last comment, again, I think I disagree. It’s hard to know if Wili, for example, has transcended the confines of his group’s identity if we don’t even know what identity it is he’s transcending, i.e. what does blackness mean, what does being poor mean, etc. I’d argue Della Lu is the only character who presents some contrast to the “norm,” because we get glimpses of how women are supposed to live/act but again, there’s not really any meat on the bones, so to speak, that allows the reader to get a very full picture of these contrasts. In other words, we only have one side of the story.

      For me this book read as just a bit too predictable, perhaps because there’s now work that’s very derivative of it that dilutes its potency when read in retrospect. I don’t know. Like I said in my review, I think this book is intriguing as is, but needs more to make it great. And comparing this book against Vinge’s other masterpieces may be unfair in and of itself.



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