https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-98j2w-1b01dfb
Roger Zelazny’s Lord of Light is one of the strangest and most ambitious science fiction novels ever written, a 1967 Hugo Award winner about a crew of colonists who have seized the identities of Hindu gods to maintain technological control over future generations, and the one man who takes on the role of the Buddha to fight back.
In this episode of Resistance Reads, Michael Kilman and Matt Wellstrom dig into why this book reads like a portrait of Silicon Valley before Silicon Valley existed, what accelerationism actually means when the people hoarding technology are literal gods, and why the idea of liberty cannot be killed no matter how much power you throw at it. Along the way they cover the New Wave science fiction movement, Joseph Campbell’s hero’s journey and why it doesn’t actually work, the curse of the Buddha, what it means to separate a leader’s ideas from their character, and why a sixty year old novel still hits this hard.
If you’ve ever wanted anthropology and science fiction in the same place, you’re in the right spot. Next Episode, House on the Cerulean Sea.