Misplaced Pages

A Kidnapping

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
The topic of this article may not meet Misplaced Pages's notability guideline for books. Please help to demonstrate the notability of the topic by citing reliable secondary sources that are independent of the topic and provide significant coverage of it beyond a mere trivial mention. If notability cannot be shown, the article is likely to be merged, redirected, or deleted.
Find sources: "A Kidnapping" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (September 2024) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
1995 short story by Greg Egan

"A Kidnapping"
Short story by Greg Egan
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
Genre(s)Science fiction
Publication
Published inAxiomatic
PublisherOrion Publishing Group
Publication date1995

"A Kidnapping" is a science-fiction short story by Australian writer Greg Egan, first published in the collection Axiomatic in 1995.

Plot

A man is contacted by hackers, who hold a digital copy of his wife's brain hostage. Meanwhile, her physical self is completely safe. Without any knowledge about how real the copy really is and whether it even thinks to truly be his wife, the man still reflects about giving in. His wife disagrees, tearing apart a self-portrait to prove it doesn't hurt her at all. Although the technology is available and can grant digital immortality, she never considered scanning her brain. The hostage was in fact reconstructed purely from memories of her husband. The husband, who did already have his brain scanned, but doesn't want to spend eternity without his wife, finally pays the hackers a ransom if they agree to halt the simulation and hand it over to him after his death.

Translations

The short story was translated into Hungarian by Erno Nemes (1998), Czech by Petr Kotrle, Romanian by Mihai-Dan Pavelescu, Japanese (1999), Russian (1999), Italian (2003), Spanish (2006), French by Francis Lustman & Quarante-Deux (2006), Danish by Niels Dalgaard, Chinese and Korean.

Reviews

Karen Burnham wrote in Greg Egan (Masters of Modern Science Fiction), that "as in 'Closer', we can never truly know what it is like to be someone else, we must always rely on the models of other people who live in our heads. We don't truly “know” them, but on some level we know our models of them. And we are used to dealing with people at a distance: through letters, e-mails, or phone calls. So it would be easy to feel as strongly about a friend's Copy as you do about the real person."

Literature

  • Burnham, Karen (2014). Greg Egan (Modern Masters of Science Fiction). Modern Masters of Science Fiction. University of Illinois Press (published 2014-04-03). ISBN 978-0252038419.

References

  1. ^ "Bibliography". 2024-04-09. Retrieved 2024-04-17.
  2. ^ "Summary Bibliography: Greg Egan". Retrieved 2024-04-19.
  3. Burnham 14, p. 64/65
  4. Burnham 14, p. 65

External links

Greg Egan
Novels
Orthogonal
Collections
Short Stories
Categories: