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J. G. Ballard | Science fiction writer | What is Science Fiction? | Good Afternoon |1977 

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22 авг 2024

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Комментарии : 101   
@davidballantyne3079
@davidballantyne3079 Год назад
This interview, which I've not seen for over 40 years, has always stuck with me because of the paintings that we get glimpses of (the original broadcast began with lingering shots of the paintings with Mavis Nicholson reading a passage from Ballard's short story 'Terminal Beach') has really stuck with me because of the paintings. I would have been about 14 at the time and wouldn't have known who Ballard was. Over the years when I thought about this interview I've come to think that it was probably Ballard given my memory of paintings of a derelict tropical compound. Its great seeing it again after all these years. In addition to Ballard's usual sharp responses (especially given what the next 45 years would bring to confirm his visions) the other thing that's interesting about this is the fact that this programme was broadcast on a British commercial TV channel in the middle of the afternoon and aimed at a mainstream audience. Compare that to now when the equivalent would be Lorraine Kelly interviewing Peter Andre about his new fitness book.... TV novacain basically, which is another Ballard prophecy to tick off the list.
@manfromnocky
@manfromnocky Месяц назад
Great comment mate.
@edwardmulholland7912
@edwardmulholland7912 3 года назад
My God - he was right about so many things. Both about then, definitely today and most probably in the future as well.
@haribo99ify
@haribo99ify 3 года назад
It’s amazing that this interview is over 40 years old and he could be talking about today. He had such foresight. I like the interviewer aswell because they seem very relaxed. It doesn’t seem like he’s there just to promote something.
@aniketsanyal5586
@aniketsanyal5586 3 года назад
Ballard's "inner space" oriented science fiction, as well as that prose style of his in so many stories (like surgical precision or a clinician's 'anaysis') really provides a useful, working language for our present. I don't assume he intended to be a visionary or prophetic/prediction-oriented scifi writer but damn, he definitely succeeded at that game (like Philip K. Dick or William Gibson, many others). Managed to access the language of the future without getting so bothered with all the technical 'scientific' details. The Atrocity Exhibition and his short story 'The Drowned Giant' are some of the best stuff I've ever read!
@black_dragon_roy_batty1544
@black_dragon_roy_batty1544 Год назад
JG Ballard writes prose like a poet
@patrickmccormack4318
@patrickmccormack4318 3 года назад
Little Seed Big Tree -- Ian Brown "This, to me, is the ultimately heroic trait of ordinary people; they say no to the tyrant and they calmly take the consequences of this resistance." -- Phiip K. Dick "What our children have to fear is not the cars on the highways of tomorrow but our own pleasure in calculating the most elegant parameters of their deaths." -- J. G. Ballard "You are not entitled to your opinion. You are entitled to your INFORMED opinion. No one is entitled to be ignorant." -- Harlan Ellison
@aromalrays6530
@aromalrays6530 11 месяцев назад
One of my very favorite writers to listen to. So earnest and unaffected.
@evansclan4eva49
@evansclan4eva49 3 года назад
His story about a future where people are forbidden to interact in person and must only communicate through computers - including families - reminds me of the covid times we’re living in now. Let’s just hope we don’t act like this when we do come out the other side. The story is The Intensive Care Unit and it ends with a family tearing themselves apart because they have forgotten how to behave around each other. It’s frightening to think that we could regress in such a way.
@davewatt7305
@davewatt7305 2 года назад
A very disturbing story. It stayed with me for weeks after. Ballard was a genius.
@evansclan4eva49
@evansclan4eva49 2 года назад
@@davewatt7305 He certainly was a genius. Just finished his autobiography. He seemed like a decent gent too.
@willrichardson519
@willrichardson519 2 года назад
The Machine Stops by E. M. Forster in 1909 is worth a read. It's short but rather prescient.
@gerryb154
@gerryb154 Год назад
ironically he would have made a terrific Doctor Who
@keithsolley
@keithsolley Год назад
Well,his novel 'High Rise' would inspire the Dr Who serial 'Paradise Towers '
@airingcupboard
@airingcupboard 3 года назад
What's interesting about this is how they are both trying to make sense of their time, whereas people choose pre-given positions today as if they have stopped trying to make sense of it. They are both uncertain to some degree. Refreshing.
@JohnDoe-tx8lq
@JohnDoe-tx8lq 3 года назад
Except that People / media / films are CONSTANTLY talking about our place in society, what it's all about, the possibilities. With the internet, people are questioning everything far more than before, economics means people no longer expect to have 30 year careers at the same firm, or even in the same industry. The possibilities to go your own way in work and life are easier and more common now. We know more, we question more, we do more. 😎
@ColombianThunder
@ColombianThunder 3 года назад
@@JohnDoe-tx8lq i don't know about qiestion more. Maybe we do, but lately it feels like more and more people take things at face value now, based on their own views. It also feels like there's an increased amount of projection upon others(which I'm sure I'm guilty of myself).
@Retrostar619
@Retrostar619 3 года назад
Exactly. They both have their views going in, but they're willing to test them in discussion. Uncertainty is a virtue.
@djturbine7565
@djturbine7565 Год назад
@@JohnDoe-tx8lq And with this purported “flexible working” and “hustle culture” comes more room for exploitation, less job security and workers rights and the further entrenchment of capitalist ideology, which implies that work is in someway virtuous and that if you are poor it’s because you don’t have the right “grindset” and should have worked harder. Your comment is incredibly naive in its framing of modern society as somehow being organised to benefit the majority of normal working people.
@JohnDoe-tx8lq
@JohnDoe-tx8lq Год назад
​@@djturbine7565 😄 looking back with your rose coloured glasses at a time of "stability and job security" when, apparently, someone was exploited! YOU are the one desperate for the good old days when the masses had even less options than today. How ironic.😆
@davidhouston4810
@davidhouston4810 2 года назад
It's fascinating to watch this now, a great writer, and his view of the world is amazing to me.
@iansmith9125
@iansmith9125 3 года назад
A great wit, and a hard critic of snobbery in English literature. I think he was unclassifiable. Like Iain banks.
@ajs41
@ajs41 3 месяца назад
I haven't read any Iain Banks. Which one of his books would you recommend for me to read first?
@andreusredloff2252
@andreusredloff2252 26 дней назад
@@ajs41wasp factory
@OneSwitch
@OneSwitch 3 года назад
Brilliant. Excellent interview.
@janeporter818
@janeporter818 3 года назад
Fascinating interview
@earinsound
@earinsound 3 года назад
"nutcases"? compared to people at sports matches, fundamentalist (or non-) churches, Wall St, et al a science fiction super fan is pretty benign.
@JohnDoe-tx8lq
@JohnDoe-tx8lq 3 года назад
Agreed - I'm really surprise how dismissive they BOTH are of these types of fans!
@scotsmanic7783
@scotsmanic7783 3 года назад
@@JohnDoe-tx8lq Why? He's not writing for Trekkie nuts.
@adaptercrash
@adaptercrash Год назад
Crappy literature, I'm well read.
@michaelwhaley3063
@michaelwhaley3063 Год назад
​@@adaptercrash, are you now? Must be fun being a wanker.
@beatdizzy
@beatdizzy 4 месяца назад
Back in the day NO ONE knew about plastic surgery, so changing the body in any way would be seen as some kind of pathology, if you are listening carefully that's the thing they are (obviously to them but not obvious to us because of our current cultures context) speaking about. The rest was a pretty new cultural phenomen that I think they are gently poking fun at as something they don't understand. Ballard actually highlights how popular it is. It really was a different time, his words about women not liking sci fi are dated but in context actually kind of kind.
@losthighway8141
@losthighway8141 Год назад
Such a great writer, so interesting to listen to
@cordeliahamilton1061
@cordeliahamilton1061 3 года назад
I have just watched an interview from around 1987 which was quite haunting, as was this. Realising that the Internet had not been 'invented' at this time makes his words even more surreal. I love the books of Ballard, and wonder if he is still around - he would be 91 now. 🤔🇬🇧
@tedl7538
@tedl7538 2 года назад
Unfortunately Ballard passed away in 2009.
@KeyserTheRedBeard
@KeyserTheRedBeard 3 года назад
most excellent content ThamesTv. I shattered the thumbs up on your video. Keep on up the quality work.
@jerryrichardson2799
@jerryrichardson2799 Год назад
Ballard was pretty private about his personal life, but he was honest about it, as well. He rarely said anything about his children or his wife.
@new_memeplex
@new_memeplex 9 месяцев назад
This interviewer is so patronising. But Ballard SHINES.
@LarryKnipfing
@LarryKnipfing 6 месяцев назад
Hard to respect an interviewer who starts every question with BUT...
@beatdizzy
@beatdizzy 4 месяца назад
He was SO controversial back in the day it's difficult to imagine, AND ftr she's Welsh so words like 'but' (& 'look you' etc) are more natural to use in that position in that language. AND bear in mind most authors wouldn't have allowed themselves to be interviewed by a woman (women were only allowed a bank account 2 years before that interview), he was so ahead of his time.
@ajs41
@ajs41 3 месяца назад
She didn't seem patronising to me.
@TheIkaraCult
@TheIkaraCult Год назад
I love this man.
@geeh2291
@geeh2291 2 года назад
Although I like MN, You feel she's rather playing to the gallery here with her choice of questions. JGB as usual was spot on, speculating on our future from the vantage of 1977.
@TheBullhannigan
@TheBullhannigan 3 года назад
I'm fascinated by the paintings in the background. I'm a painter myself. Does anyone know who the artist is? Does anyone know how one would go about finding out who the artist is, this being dated from 1977? Thanks.
@Machster10
@Machster10 3 года назад
me too
@Trelkovsky69
@Trelkovsky69 2 года назад
I know, they often used Max Ernst paintings on his book covers. His more landscape-looking paintings resemble the style we see here, I think. But I am no art expert, so i might be wrong.
@TheBullhannigan
@TheBullhannigan 2 года назад
@@Trelkovsky69 that's interesting. I'll check it out. Ernst is a great artist. Thanks for the reply.
@jasonluery1111
@jasonluery1111 2 года назад
It’s amusing to see how the interviewer’s low opinion of the science fiction “nutcases” is referring to the coders and culture shapers and fans who have inherited the earth.
@ajs41
@ajs41 3 месяца назад
That was a tongue in cheek comment I think.
@acajoom
@acajoom 4 месяца назад
Very nice. Great questions too.
@kurisensei
@kurisensei 2 года назад
Thanks for the upload. I quite like that she's completely ignorant about him and sci-fi in general.
@billsharkey9365
@billsharkey9365 2 года назад
Yeah she doesnt suck up or read into his comments , I actually am old enough to remember her face !!!😁
@southernstacker7315
@southernstacker7315 Год назад
I was 7 when Ballard did this interview. He was right.
@ajs41
@ajs41 3 месяца назад
True.
@patrickmccormack4318
@patrickmccormack4318 Год назад
"You almost believe, don't you, that modern novelists slightly cop out of their responsibility by writing books about the emotions only." -- Mavis Nicholson Ballard believed science fiction to be the "true" literature of the 20th century. Question: Is there, will there be, a "true" literature of the 21st century? Note: During this interview, Ballard gave context to a definition of "true" literature: "... Somebody who responds to a particular set of changes around him... My job is to respond to the world in which I live... and I see science and technology as the transforming factors." -- J. G. Ballard For the 21st century, what are the transforming factors? How have we responded to a particular set of changes around us? How will we respond? Note: As artists, what is our job? During a 1977 lecture, William S. Burroughs answered that question. "I'm postulating that the function of art, and I include in this category creative work in science -- that is, creation in the widest sense -- is to put us in touch with what we know and don't know that we know. You can't tell anybody anything he doesn't know already." -- William S. Burroughs Beyond -- Estas Tonne "... and you know what the beyond is? It's that connection... that connection is like a lighthouse. It's something that we can connect to as a unified field which is beyond words, beyond the mind." -- Estas Tonne "I aim to misbehave." -- Malcolm Reynolds, captain of Serenity
@32bevula
@32bevula 6 месяцев назад
Ballard claimed that SF was the authentic literature of the 20th century... I would nuance his claim to the millennial arc between the late 20th century and the unfolding 21st century. I encountered Ballard in 1964 via an excellent SF anthology called Spectrum 3. Ballards contribution was The Voices Of Time. The evocative, finely honed prose of this story showed me that SF could be far more than zapping aliens. My first purchase of a Ballard book was The Terminal Beach.... a superb array of short stories. I do think JG Ballard's special vision of the human psyche in the context of a strange, often disturbing future is best conveyed in his short stories.
@petersmernoff9590
@petersmernoff9590 2 года назад
Ballard's ATROCITY EXHIBITION is the most radical--and disturbing-- book I've ever read.
@ghostfires
@ghostfires 3 года назад
Tell me more about this 'science fiction' of which you speak?
@noklarok
@noklarok 2 года назад
'3 years was enough to institutionalise them' - 2 years into pan-dem-ic
@William_Van_Landingham_III
@William_Van_Landingham_III 3 года назад
The women who wouldn't get his fiction then would be outright antagonistic to him today. I can't imagine him being able to publish a book like Rushing to Paradise in 2020 unless it was self published. Thanks for uploading, it was enjoyable :)
@earinsound
@earinsound 3 года назад
why's that? a book about an all-female paradise island? sounds lovely.
@William_Van_Landingham_III
@William_Van_Landingham_III 3 года назад
​@@earinsound Not sure if you're pulling my leg or if you read a misleading synopsis of the book.
@scotsmanic7783
@scotsmanic7783 3 года назад
@@earinsound The main female character in it is, technically, a serial killer.
@TheDungeonDive
@TheDungeonDive Год назад
He could totally have it published today. What are you talking about?
@46metube
@46metube Год назад
Oh how 'the bad news' is coming true.
@crawlingamongthestars3736
@crawlingamongthestars3736 Год назад
If he thought technology had staggeringly and somewhat alarmingly changed human life back in 1976, boy oh boy would he be doing backflips if he were still alive today...
@dcanmore
@dcanmore 9 месяцев назад
well he died in 2009 so he saw some of it.
@crawlingamongthestars3736
@crawlingamongthestars3736 9 месяцев назад
@@dcanmoreSure, but the last few years things have really started to become outrageous, what with AI, deepfakes, self-driving cars, plans to terraform Mars, robotics, cybernetic brain implants, online disinformation and censorship, advancements in social media and smartphones, military tech, etcetera. Things have REALLY started to take off now, and it's fucking frightening. Most people seem to think all of this is going to be a net good in the end, but I'm a serious doubter as far as that is concerned, and it would have been very interesting to see Ballard's take on all these recent developments...
@ajs41
@ajs41 3 месяца назад
Most of the ideas behind today's technology were already available in 1977, oddly enough.
@crawlingamongthestars3736
@crawlingamongthestars3736 3 месяца назад
@@ajs41 True, but they were for the most part just ideas at that point. To see them become actual reality, and the effect they have on society, is another thing entirely.
@petergivenbless900
@petergivenbless900 9 месяцев назад
Want to feel old? Ballard was 47 in this interview, and now (November 2023) the actor that played the young Jim Graham in the movie 'Empire of the Sun', Christian Bale, is 49!
@gamayun6102
@gamayun6102 Год назад
No way a great conversation like this could take place here in Western Europe right now on tv without degenerating into some sort of social justice activisim.
@TheDungeonDive
@TheDungeonDive Год назад
Lol. Ballard was a total social justice activist. Jesus Christ. Have you read his fiction? Every book he ever wrote was about some kind of social justice activism.
@rasheedknox2140
@rasheedknox2140 7 месяцев назад
She said I haven't read much science fiction (but you're stuff I can't really explain) ...why are you trying to frightening me ...I would have spit out my milk..
@AchtungEnglander
@AchtungEnglander 3 года назад
You know the mantra - the geeks will inherent the earth. Gates, Nadella, Cook, Zuckerberg, Bozos, Musk. Tell someone from the 1977 the world of 2020 they would find it incredible.
@ajs41
@ajs41 3 месяца назад
Both these two were born in 1930.
@billsharkey9365
@billsharkey9365 2 года назад
Look at the global fck up we are living through now ,no matter wot side your on !!💀💀
@Mewted
@Mewted 2 года назад
straight line --- kafka - orwell - sartre - bradbury - ballard - self
@sg639
@sg639 2 года назад
Not sure you're right about Kafka. With the exception of "In the Penal Colony," he's critiquing administrative/bureaucratic violence, which isn't exactly technology driven/mediated, as one would think about sci-fi. However, I might also include Camus (The Plague) and Garcia Marquez (100 Years of Solitude).
@celineburt8576
@celineburt8576 2 года назад
More like Poe-Conrad-Celine-(Bradbury ok)-Ballard. Ballard once said he was one of the bad boys of literature "like Celine". He praised Poe and Bradbury as short story writers. Conrad runs through Ballard's apocalyptica novels. Celine wrote a ton of technology into his novel Death on the Installment Plan, probably the first real ground plan of the Twentieth Century. Style and humor completely different than Ballard though.
@sg639
@sg639 2 года назад
@@celineburt8576 ...And Celine was a virulent antisemite.
@ephemera5714
@ephemera5714 2 года назад
no
@johnp8880
@johnp8880 Год назад
​@sg639 Orwell and Sartre are not science fiction writers either. Mewted was just delineating Ballard's thematic and ideological heritage (although I myself perceive Ballard's worldview as much closer to Huxley's Brave New World than 1984).
@chrisflakus8681
@chrisflakus8681 Год назад
"Lesser of two weavels" 17:03, smfh.
@Machster10
@Machster10 3 года назад
She's really focused on this camp thing. wtf
@manic2360
@manic2360 9 месяцев назад
He ended up writing about his experience in the book - Empire of the Sun.
@JohnDoe-tx8lq
@JohnDoe-tx8lq 3 года назад
"You should have some qualifications" - "Yes, I live in 1977!" 😁 He talked a lot of sense about threats that have become invisible. It's odd how dismissive they are of 'Si Fi conventions', as if they are a weird cult, full of nutters. People enjoy dressing up and talking about their fav characters - shocking!! Yet (she) would be fine with fanatics of Mr Darcy and the fashion in Jane Austen fiction. Sci-fi & Fantasy Cosplay is so massive now, completely embraced by the media. - Which reminds me, I must clean my body hugging latex suit for next weekends meeting... 😜
@luc4901
@luc4901 2 года назад
He sounds like Stewie from Family Guy
@renanvirginio2197
@renanvirginio2197 3 года назад
Incomplete.
@scotthjackson5651
@scotthjackson5651 2 года назад
posh and hyper-intensified
@ajs41
@ajs41 3 месяца назад
He's not particularly posh, he just talks like most middle-class people did at the time.
@matthewdevereux1288
@matthewdevereux1288 3 года назад
The sage of Shepperton. @devereuxmatthew
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