Noon Universe Explained

The Noon Universe (Russian term: "Мир Полудня" or "Мир Полдня" – "World of Noon"; also known as the “Wanderers’ Universe”[1]) is a fictional future setting for a number of hard science fiction novels written by Arkady and Boris Strugatsky. The universe is named after , chronologically the first novel from the series and referring to humanity reaching its noon in the 22nd century.

According to Arkady Strugatsky, the brothers at first did not make a conscious effort to create a fictional universe. Rather, they reused characters and settings from prior works whenever they found it convenient. It was only later that they began drawing on common themes and plot threads from various novels to create newer works.

Description

The victory of communism and the advance of technological progress on the Earth of the Noon Universe has resulted in an overabundance of resources and eliminated the need for most types of manual labor.

Mankind is capable of near-instantaneous interstellar travel. Earth's social organization is presumably communist and can be described as a highly technologically advanced anarchistic meritocracy. There is no state structure, no institutionalized coercion, no police etc., yet the society's functioning is safeguarded by raising everyone as responsible individuals, with the guidance of a set of High Councils accepted by everyone in each particular field of activity.

The main governing body is the World Council, which is composed of the brightest scientists, historians, doctors and teachers. Local matters are handled by the regional versions of the council. Planetary councils are present on each Earth colony (such as in Rainbow) as well, but "colony" in this context refers to a planet that was not home to any sentient life before the arrival of Terran settlers. In the Noon Universe, Earth has never attempted to seize permanent control over any other civilization.

There is the COMCON (COMmission for CONtacts) in charge of contacts with aliens and the secret service COMCON-2 for clandestine operations.

Sentient races

The universe is populated by a number of sentient races. Some of them are humanoid, and others are so alien that humanity did not realise for decades that they were sentient. Several sentient races maintain diplomatic relations with Earth's society. Many planets in the Noon Universe are inhabited by races identical to humans in all but minor genetic differences. It has been speculated that they were humans who wound up on other worlds by the manipulations of the Wanderers (as Beetle in the Anthill shows, that is hardly unprecedented).

The Wanderers are the most mysterious race in the Noon Universe. Technologically advanced and highly secretive, the Wanderers are suspected of manipulating sentient beings throughout Noon Universe for their own purposes. While those purposes remain unclear, it is hinted that they try to "progress" various sentient beings, including the human race.

The following sentient species are depicted: Ark Megaforms (негуманоиды Ковчега), Garrotian Snails (слизни Гарроты), Golovans (Голованы, sentient dogs), Humans, Ludens (людены, who are superhumans), Leoniders (леонидяне) Tagorians (тагоряне) Wanderers (Странники, a superrace).

Other possibly-sentient species that are mentioned in the books are septoids (see ) whose sentience is not really confirmed, semi-sentient prehistoric molluscs katapumoridako (see The Time Wanderers) and the unidentified sentient creature killed by Pol Gnedykh in the Kroox solar system (Noon: 22nd Century).

Progressors

One of the controversial occupations in the Noon Universe is that of the progressors, agents embedded in less-advanced humanoid civilizations in order to accelerate their development or to resolve their problems. Progressors' methods range from rescuing local scientists and artists to overthrowing local governments. Konstantin Šindelář, the Czech translator of the Strugatsky brothers' works (among others) and the biographer of the Strugatsky brothers consider the phenomenon of "progressorship" to be one of the major concepts introduced into the social science fiction.[2] [3] Progressorship is a considerable element in the novels Beetle in the Anthill in which the term was first introduced and The Waves Extinguish the Wind, but literary critics agree that the idea, although unnamed, may be found in the 1962 novel Escape Attempt and that a number of subsequent novels, notably Hard to Be a God, deal with progressorship.[4] [5]

COMCON-2 suspects that the Wanderers act as progressors with respect to the Earth and try to counteract them.

Works

These works by the Strugatsky brothers are set in the Noon Universe (listed chronologically):

There are loose connections to early stories The Land of Crimson Clouds ("Страна багровых туч"), The Way to Amalthea ("Путь на Амальтею"), Space Apprentice ("Стажеры"), The Final Circle of Paradise (through Ivan Zhilin), Ispytanie SKIBR, Chastnye predpolozheniya, mainly through Bykovs family.

In the early 1990s, the Strugatsky brothers began writing what they intended to be a final Noon Universe novel. It would have tied up some of the plot threads that were left unresolved in previous novels. However, after the death of Arkady Strugatsky, the surviving brother, Boris, felt that he could not bring himself to finish the novel. The book would have been named White Ferz (Russian: "Белый Ферзь"). "Ferz" or "Vizier" is the Russian masculine term for the queen in chess. The Strugatsky brothers planned the book as a direct sequel of Prisoners of Power following the story of infiltration of the progressor Maxim Kammerer into the elite of the Island Empire.[7]

In the late 1990s, a series of fiction by notable Russian sci-fi writers, titled , was published in Russia with an endorsement of Boris Strugatsky. The pieces in the series build upon Strugatsky brothers' ideas and works, and many of them are set in the Noon Universe.[8] In particular, Aleksandr Lukyanov wrote the novel , author's vision of what the novel White Ferz could have been.[9] More various Strugatsky fanfics were published later.[10]

From 1996 to 2015, there was a re-release of all Noon Universe novels as part of the series. This re-release is notable being accompanied with introductory articles written by literary critics from the perspective of Noon Universe historians looking back on the events of the said novels several decades later, as well as with the excerpts of Boris Strugatsky's memoirs .[11]

Personalities

Planets

Reception, analysis, and influence

The setting is a future utopia that gets gradually deconstructed as the authors become disillusioned with the Soviet Union and move away from the "technological optimism... depicting a quasi-Marxist perfection" to address the failures of the Soviet society. In writing about the Noon Universe, the Strugatsky brothers have been argued to have created their own utopian ideology, or "amateur personal metaphysics", that is based on the primacy of science like more modern view of transhumanism.[13]

Critic Ezra Glinter described the Noon Universe as a socialist utopia in which humanity has survived its crises but still has problems to solve, and in which the conflict is between "the good and the better".[14]

It has been suggested that James Cameron's Avatar's lush jungle planet has been inspired by the planet Pandora of Noon Universe.[15] [16]

Noon Universe's human civilization has been described as techno-patriarchal and some of the antagonists as eco-matriarchal.[17]

Footnotes

  1. Givens. John. October 2011. The Strugatsky Brothers and Russian Science Fiction: Editor's Introduction. Russian Studies in Literature. en. 47. 4. 3–6. 10.2753/RSL1061-1975470400. 194160128. 1061-1975.
  2. Šindelář, Konstantin, Братья Стругацкие : феномен прогрессорства в мире Полудня, Новая русистика, 2011, vol. 4, issue 2, pp. 29-41
  3. Скаландис А. Братья Стругацкие. — М. : АСТ, 2008. — 702 pp. — ISBN 978-5-17-052684-0, p. 53
  4. Миры братьев Стругацких. Энциклопедия. М—Я / Сост. В. Борисов. — М., СПб. : АСТ; Terra Fantastica, 1999. — 560 с.
  5. Володихин Д. М., Прашкевич Г. М. Братья Стругацкие. Мечты о несбывшемся. — М. : Молодая гвардия, 2012. — 350 с
  6. Despite having a similar plot Disquiet and Snail on the Slope are completely different works with different ideas and characters. The former is set in the Noon Universe and features some well-known characters like Leonid Gorbovsky, the latter has no connection to other books about Noon Universe.
  7. https://web.archive.org/web/20150414190807/http://lib.ru/STRUGACKIE/comments.txt Борис Стругацкий. Комментарии к пройденному (журнальный вариант)
  8. https://fantlab.ru/work142762 Время учеников
  9. https://web.archive.org/web/20170220092857/https://fantlab.ru/blogarticle46507page2 Александр Лукьянов «Черная Пешка»
  10. https://fantlab.ru/work515279 Свободные фантазии на тему миров Стругацких
  11. https://fantlab.ru/series1283 Миры братьев Стругацких
  12. Although the planet was never officially named, this is the name commonly used by Russian fans.
  13. Zanerv. Dmitrii. 2016-10-01. It's Easy to Be One of the Intelligentsia. Russian Studies in Literature. 52. 3–4. 282–302. 10.1080/10611975.2016.1264042. 193699422. 1061-1975.
  14. News: (Give Me That) Old-Time Socialist Utopia . 25 May 2024 . . 11 May 2015.
  15. Book: Indigenous Intellectual Property: A Handbook of Contemporary Research. Matthew Rimmer. 18 December 2015. Edward Elgar Publishing. 978-1-78195-590-1. 187.
  16. News: James Cameron rejects claims Avatar epic borrows from Russians' sci-fi novels. Harding. Luke. 2010-01-13. The Guardian. 2019-12-04. en-GB. 0261-3077.
  17. Book: The Post-Soviet Politics of Utopia: Language, Fiction and Fantasy in Modern Russia. Mikhail Suslov. Per-Arne Bodin. 19 September 2019. Bloomsbury Publishing. 978-1-78831-705-4. 66–.

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