¶ … Barry's "Machine Man"
Originally published in 2011, Max Barry's futuristic science fiction novel "Machine Man" was first made available to readers as an online serial, before being updated and collected into a full-fledged book. Barry bucked publishing industry protocol and posted excerpts from his "Machine Man" to his personal website, imploring his regular readers to submit criticism and feedback in the hope of collectively shaping his creative vision. As one of the first literary works to be "crowdsourced" in terms of content, the version of "Machine Man" which emerged from this collaborative process is, much like its conflicted protagonist, an amalgamation of various constituent parts which comes together to form a harmonious whole. Barry's thematic thrust with the novel -- which tells the tale of Charles Neumann, a subordinate scientist working for a military research conglomerate known as Better Future -- is humanity's ceaseless pursuit of perfection, and the consequences awaiting those who refuse to accept the concept of limitation. The tale of Neumann is one of alienation among humanity, as the lowly lab worker struggles to relate to those around him during the book's introductory passages. When the aloof Neumann reveals to the reader through first-person narration that "I am not a people person. Whenever I'm evaluated, I score very low on social metrics. My ex-boss said she had never seen anyone score a zero on Interpersonal Empathy before ... If anyone is having a party, I am not invited" (Barry 6), the confession serves as both character development and foreshadowing. After admitting that he is not a "people person," Neumann undergoes a transformative process intended to turn those prophetic words into reality, as a gruesome injury forces him to systematically replace the parts of his person that make him like other people.
When Neumann's leg is severed from his body in a laboratory accident, the reader is provided with a telling glimpse into this utterly unique man's psyche, as the grievously wounded man analyzes his newfound handicap in disturbingly cold and clinical fashion. As Neumann observes "I was a junior high physics problem. If Charles Neumann is a human being with volume 80 liters, oozing bodily fluid at the rate of 0.5 liters per minute, how often must we replace his 400-milliliter saline bags. I felt I should have been more sophisticated than that" (Barry 13), the implication is that his sense of humanity has long since been fractured, with the loss of his leg serving only to confirm what he already knew about himself. Neumann's subsequent strive to rebuild himself, as something superior to his previous incarnation, fusing his form with metal gears and pistons to surpass previous capability, forms the foundation of Barry's narrative structure. Thus, readers are allowed to observe as Neumann stoically accepts the impact of his injury and sets to work improving on the standard prosthetic limbs proffered by an ostensibly concerned and conscientious employer. Hospital prosthetist Lola Shanks is introduced as a foil to Neumann's steady advancement, because even as he works tirelessly to improve the functionality of the outmoded device he derisively refers to as a "bucket on a stick" (Barry 31), his efforts to impress the woman remain futile. Throughout the early chapters of "Machine Man" the reader is exposed to Neumann in terms of his pursuit of perfection, a rhetorical choice on the part of Barry's which appears to be intended as a scathing rebuke of modern society's ceaseless striving for artificial improvement.
A constant theme throughout "Machine Man" is the unrelenting sense of restlessness which pervades Neumann's attitudes and interactions, and even as he succeeds in crafting an innovative system to replace his obsolete prosthetic, Barry is intent on revealing the depth of his discontent. When Neumann narrates a particularly sober assessment of his situation by saying "it occurred to me that I hadn't escaped my bottlenecks. I had only pushed them back. I had made a leg that could walk by itself, which was okay, but I could see now that this was about as far as it could go. All improvement from here would be incremental, because the bottleneck was my body" (Barry 38), this insight into his mindset is meant as both an individual revelation, and an accusation launched against the modern ethic of overindulgent self-improvement. Barry wrote "Machine Man" in 2009, during the height of personal glorification via social media, and clearly Neumann is positioned as a reflection of the generation...
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