Trouble on Triton
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''Trouble on Triton: An Ambiguous Heterotopia'' (1976) is a science fiction novel by American writer Samuel R. Delany. It was nominated for the 1976 Nebula Award for Nebula Award for Best Novel, Best Novel, and was shortlisted for a retrospective James Tiptree, Jr. Award in 1995. It was originally published under the shorter title ''Triton''. Delany has said that ''Trouble on Triton'' was written partly in dialogue with Ursula K. Le Guin's anarchism, anarchist science fiction novel ''The Dispossessed'', whose subtitle was ''An Ambiguous Utopia''. It is also loosely linked to other books by him (particularly ''Neveryóna'') in its references to "the modular calculus", a vaguely described future mathematics that would analyze analogies, fictional constructs, and possibly human personalities. The most recent U.S. edition from Wesleyan University Press (1996) has a foreword by the postmodern novelist Kathy Acker, focusing on ''Trouble on Triton'' as Orphism (religion), Orphic fiction.


Plot introduction

As the subtitle implies, the novel offers several conflicting perspectives on the concept of utopia. ''Utopia'' literally means "good place" or "no place". Delany takes the term ''Heterotopia (space), heterotopia'' from the writings of philosopher Michel Foucault.Sean Grattan
"I am a Reasonably Happy Man: The Trouble with Trouble on Triton"
Tor.com, Aug 2, 2010 (accessed Jan 31 2016)
Literally, heterotopia means "other place" or "a place of differences". Foucault uses the term to designate spaces outside everyday fixed institutional and social spaces, for example trains, motels and cemeteries. In the novel's future Solar System, Neptune, Neptune's moon Triton (moon), Triton supports one of several human societies independent from Earth, which has developed along radically libertarianism, libertarian lines in some ways: though a representative government exists, it has virtually no power to regulate private behavior, and citizens may choose to live in an area where no laws apply at all. Technology provides for a high degree of self-modification, so that one can change one's physical appearance, gender reassignment therapy, gender, sexual orientation, and even specific patterns of likes and dislikes.


Plot summary

The novel examines how Triton's freedoms and customs are perceived by the main characters, particularly Bron Helstrom, a young man who has previously worked on Mars as a male prostitute. The society of Mars is far harsher than that of Triton, and it has evidently influenced Bron's personality. He is self-absorbed, often lacks insight about himself and others, and has great difficulty with personal relationships. Though the civilization of Triton offers everything that he could reasonably want, he is unhappy with his life, out of harmony with those around him, and continually looking for others to blame whenever things go wrong. As the novel continues, political tensions between Triton and Earth lead to a destructive interplanetary war. This is mainly used as the backdrop for Bron's (ultimately disastrous) relationship with a brilliant young woman known as the Spike, but Delany speculates about how an interplanetary war might actually unfold.


Reception

Although dissatisfied with the novel's "abrupt" conclusion, Richard A. Lupoff praised ''Triton'' as "a thoroughly absorbing, highly rewarding reading experience. . . . a noble and fascinating experiment [that] speaks well for the author."


Technology

The novel offers a unique directional artificial gravitational field created by inducing relativistic motion of atomic particles, essentially extreme elliptical orbits.


Connections to other works

''Trouble on Triton'' is not to be confused with the 1941 Henry Kuttner novel or the 1954 Alan E. Nourse novel ''Trouble on Titan.'' The title of the novel was inspired by Leonard Bernstein's 1952 opera, ''Trouble in Tahiti''. Fred Pohl, the editor at Bantam, made Delany shorten the title to ''Triton'' to avoid confusion. ''Trouble on Triton'' contains the first two parts of the five-part series Return to Nevèrÿon (series)#"Some Informal Remarks Toward the Modular Calculus", "Some Informal Remarks Toward the Modular Calculus", which continues in several volumes of the ''Return to Nevèrÿon (series), Return to Nevèrÿon'' series. The novel as a whole is Part One, while Part Two is the novel's second appendix. Bron's home city of Bellona on Mars shares its name with the Bellona where Delany's other novel ''Dhalgren'' is set. Several plot elements in ''Trouble on Triton'' have Stars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand#Connections to Delany's other work, similar corresponding elements in Delany's ''Stars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand''. ''Trouble on Triton'' is set in the same universe as Delany's short story "Time Considered as a Helix of Semi-Precious Stones", included in his collection ''Aye, and Gomorrah, and other stories''. The complex game ''vlet'', which Bron observes the play of, is inspired by the Joanna Russ short story "A Game of Vlet", found in her collection ''The Zanzibar Cat''.


Notes


References

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Further reading

* * {{DEFAULTSORT:Triton 1976 American novels 1976 science fiction novels American science fiction novels Libertarian science fiction books Novels set on Mars Novels by Samuel Delany Novels with transgender themes Fiction set on Triton (moon) Utopian novels