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Journal of Planning Education and Research, Vol. 18, No. 1, 49-60 (1998)
DOI: 10.1177/0739456X9801800105

The Future of the Future in Planning: Appropriating Cyberpunk Visions of the City

Robert Warren

School of Urban Afairs and Public Policy, University of Delaware, Newark; rwarren{at}udel.edu

Stacy Warren

Department of Geography and Anthropology, Eastern Washington University, Cheney; swarren{at}ewu.edu

Samuel Nunn

Center for Urban Policy and the Environment, School of Piblic and Environmental Affairs, Indiana University, Indianapolis; snunn{at}speanet.iupui.edu

Colin Warren

Planning's vision of life in the 21st century tends to be more-of-the-same or the adoption, often implicit, of a market-based information society in which telecommunications advances will restructure time and space in ways that are beneficial in the long run. The future of the future, however, deserves more attention in urban planning. Utopian constructs have largely been abandoned and traditional methods of projection and modeling are poor techniques for anticipating qualitative and nonlinear change. An exploration of cyberpunk writings, a genre of science fiction, offers the opportunity to critically examine and assess the hegemonic model of the information society as well as more dystopian pictures of how evolving social, economic, cultural, and technological patterns could combine in the next century. Attending to the urban dimensions of these fictional works and discourses about them can contribute to more realistic and ethical planning scenarios of the future.


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