Pat Cadigan's Cyberpunk Realities (WisCon 31 panel): Difference between revisions

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Reading, Viewing, and Critiquing SF&F•Assembly• Saturday, 10:00-11:15 a.m.
Reading, Viewing, and Critiquing SF&F•Assembly• Saturday, 10:00-11:15 a.m.


SF writer Pat Cadigan's novels take us inside the lives of cybernetic therapists, cops, media artists, and even the dead. Cadigan's futures are both fantastic and believable, intertwining virtual and real worlds in a way now part of the lives of many geeks. While science fiction has a lousy track record predicting the future, Cadigan's novels and stories anticipate the questions we're dealing with in our blogs and "Second Lives."
SF writer [[Pat Cadigan]]'s novels take us inside the lives of cybernetic therapists, cops, media artists, and even the dead. Cadigan's futures are both fantastic and believable, intertwining virtual and real worlds in a way now part of the lives of many geeks. While science fiction has a lousy track record predicting the future, Cadigan's novels and stories anticipate the questions we're dealing with in our blogs and "[[Second Life|Second Lives]]."


M: Maureen Kincaid Speller, Penny Hill, Bill Humphries, Margaret McBride, Fred Schepartz
M: [[Maureen Kincaid Speller]], [[Penny Hill]], [[Bill Humphries]], [[Margaret McBride]], [[Fred Schepartz]]


[[Category:WisCon 31 panels]]
[[Category:WisCon 31 panels]]

Latest revision as of 20:54, 20 June 2007

Reading, Viewing, and Critiquing SF&F•Assembly• Saturday, 10:00-11:15 a.m.

SF writer Pat Cadigan's novels take us inside the lives of cybernetic therapists, cops, media artists, and even the dead. Cadigan's futures are both fantastic and believable, intertwining virtual and real worlds in a way now part of the lives of many geeks. While science fiction has a lousy track record predicting the future, Cadigan's novels and stories anticipate the questions we're dealing with in our blogs and "Second Lives."

M: Maureen Kincaid Speller, Penny Hill, Bill Humphries, Margaret McBride, Fred Schepartz