Remembrance of Earth's Past
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (March 2024) |
| |
Author | Liu Cixin[a] |
---|---|
Original title | 地球往事; Dìqiú Wǎngshì |
Translator | Ken Liu (books 1 and 3) Joel Martinsen (book 2) |
Country | China |
Language | Mandarin Chinese |
Genre | Hard science fiction, alien invasion |
Publisher | Chongqing Publishing Group (Chinese edition) |
Published | May 2008 – November 2010 (original trilogy) 2011 (fanfiction spin-off) |
Published in English | November 11, 2014 – September 19, 2016 (original trilogy) July 16, 2019 (spin-off) |
Media type | |
No. of books | 3 |
Remembrance of Earth's Past | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Simplified Chinese | 地球往事 | ||||||
Traditional Chinese | 地球往事 | ||||||
Literal meaning | Earth's Past | ||||||
| |||||||
Alternative Chinese name | |||||||
Simplified Chinese | 三体 | ||||||
Traditional Chinese | 三體 | ||||||
Literal meaning | Three-Bodies | ||||||
|
Remembrance of Earth's Past (Chinese: 地球往事; pinyin: Dìqiú Wǎngshì; lit. 'Earth's Past') is a science fiction novel series by Chinese writer Liu Cixin. The series is also popularly referred to as Three-Body from part of the title of its first novel, The Three-Body Problem (Chinese: 三体; pinyin: Sān Tǐ; lit. 'Three-Body').[2] The series details humanity's discovery of and preparation for an alien invasion force from the planet Trisolaris.
Books
[edit]Original trilogy
[edit]The books in the Remembrance of Earth's Past trilogy are:[3]
Title (English) | Title (Chinese) | Title (Chinese Alternate) | Date | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
The Three-Body Problem | 三体 | 三体I | 2006 | English translation by Ken Liu published by Tor Books on November 11, 2014.[4] |
The Dark Forest | 黑暗森林 | 三体II | 2008 | English translation by Joel Martinsen published by Tor Books on August 11, 2015. |
Death's End | 死神永生 | 三体III | 2010 | English translation by Ken Liu published by Tor Books on September 20, 2016[4] (September 19 in digital stores).[5] |
Extended series
[edit]- Ball Lightning, a 2004 novel by Liu Cixin, set earlier in the same universe.
- The Redemption of Time (观想之宙), originally posted to an internet forum as fan fiction in 2010 by Li Jun writing as Baoshu, that was later published by Chongqing Press, the original trilogy publisher, with the permission of Liu Cixin in 2011, as Three-Body X: Aeon of Contemplation (Chinese: 三体X·观想之宙; pinyin: Sān Tǐ X · Guān Xiǎng Zhī Zhòu). It was translated by Ken Liu into English for Tor Books and published on July 16, 2019, as The Redemption of Time.[6]
Synopsis
[edit]The Three-Body Problem
[edit]Astronomer Ye Wenjie is brought to the military's top-secret Red Coast Project after suffering an attack during the Cultural Revolution. She achieves a significant advancement in the search for extraterrestrial civilization when she uses the Sun as an amplifier to send the first sounds of Earth's civilization into space. Meanwhile, the planet Trisolaris, located four light years distant and dominated by the chaotic orbits of its three suns, experiences ever-recurring destruction and rebirth, thus forcing the planet's inhabitants to flee their home planet. As they prepare their exodus, Ye Wenjie, despairing of humanity's ability to save itself from itself, exposes the coordinates of the Earth to the Trisolarans, completely changing the fates of both worlds.
When anomalies begin to disrupt the ability of earth's scientists to conduct fundamental research, nanomaterials researcher Wang Miao plays the mysterious online game "Three-Body Problem" and starts to explore the nature of the game's world. Wang Miao meets the secretive Earth-Trisolaris Organization (ETO), created to support the impending arrival of Trisolarans, while attending a player meeting. "Operations Guzheng" allows the Operations Centre to partially defeat the Adventists (who want the Trisolarans to wipe out humanity) and the Redemptionists (who seek to help the Trisolarans find a computational solution to the three-body problem plaguing Trisolaris). It also reveals that the Trisolarans have launched their invasion of Earth in search of a stable place to live. The end of humanity draws near as the huge Trisolaran fleet approaches Earth after using their superior technology to shut down Earth's advances in fundamental science.[7]
The Dark Forest
[edit]Following the Trisolarans' use of technology to lock down Earth science and launch a huge space fleet straight into the solar system, human beings also create a huge space fleet to react to the unprecedented Earth civilization crisis, while the Planetary Defence Council (PDC) uses the fatal flaw in the Trisolarans' logic to create the "Wallfacer Plan". Astronomer Luo Ji is unexpectedly selected as one of the four "wallfacers" to launch a secret counteroffensive against the Trisolarans. The Trisolarians respond by deploying "wallbreakers" chosen by Earth's betrayers to make up for the Trisolarians' inability to see through human tactics.
In the fight for survival, Luo eventually recognises his responsibilities from escaping and hedonism at first and devises a strategy to fight the invasion of Trisolaris civilization. Luo Ji also confirms the Dark Forest Rule, which states that any civilization that reveals its location will be wiped out. With this discovery, he threatens to reveal the Trisolaris' position coordinates to the whole universe, temporarily delaying the Trisolaran's invasion of the solar system and establishing a precarious strategic balance between Earth and Trisolaris.[8]
Death's End
[edit]Using the life of human Cheng Xin on Earth as its main line, this book continues human history after the establishment of deterrence in the second work, Dark Forest, and further reveals the truth of the Dark Forest predicament in the cosmos. Humanity's first glimpse of the truth of the dark universe came from the fight with the Trisolaran civilization, which made Earth's civilization shiver in the dark night like a scared child. They believe they have discovered the key to survival, but in fact, they are far from qualified for an interstellar fight.[citation needed]
On the cosmic battlefield, the attack in the Dark Forest that has threatened the survival of two civilizations is simply a minor episode. As the techniques and weapons of war have far outpaced human imagination and the day of witnessing the battlefield is the day of extermination, no one has ever seen a real interstellar war, and it is impossible to see one. Although the solar system does not survive in the book, Cheng Xin and Guan Yifan from the Starship civilization manage to keep the flame of human civilization in the solar system.[9]
Science fiction concepts
[edit]Sophons
[edit]Sophons are created from eleven-dimensional protons dimensionally unfolded down to two-dimensional protons with Trisolaran particle accelerators. While in the two-dimensional form, they are embedded with circuitry to create a supercomputer. Once online, the embedded supercomputer could control the proton's dimensional level and could fold itself back into an eleven-dimensional proton. To be seen with the naked eye, the protons could unfold themselves down to a fourth-, fifth-, or sixth-dimensional form, becoming larger with each subsequent lower dimension without changing mass. They can visually record anything and thus their secondary purpose is to act as surveillance devices, beaming the information they gather back to another sophon instantaneously via quantum entanglement. Their primary purpose for their Trisolaran manufacturers is to disrupt Earth's particle accelerators, capable of straying into the paths of fired particles and scrambling the results of experiments before re-assembling, effectively blocking advancement of the science. Since they can move through three-dimensional space at the speed of light, a single sophon is capable of disrupting all of Earth's particle accelerators.
Droplets
[edit]Trisolaran space probes are covered in a strong interaction force material. Due to this material, they are stronger than any material in the solar system and thus are impervious to any physical attack. Their propulsion system is capable of moving in any direction in 3D space. Seemingly unaffected by inertia, they can make sudden impossible turns, and their primary method of attack is to simply smash through objects.
Curvature propulsion
[edit]Simplified in a demonstration as a piece of soap attached to a paper boat on water, with the soap reducing the water tension at its end, and the water tension disparity propelling the boat. Traveling through previous paths slows the boat down due to decreased surface tension. Curvature Propulsion is a method of acceleration to lightspeed that utilizes the same concept, via reducing the speed of light it is possible to drag a ship through space at light speed, while its wake is a reduced light-speed region of space.
Hibernation
[edit]Humanity by the time of Dark Forest has developed cryogenic technology, capable of preserving a human life, unaging, for hundreds of years barring certain genetic disorders. Initially, it is viewed as a sign of inequality before it is fully developed, viewed as a way for the rich to simply skip through the centuries to eras of more advanced technology, peace, and human development. With the advent of the Trisolaran invasion, however, it becomes a near-worthless technology in terms of demand, as people prefer to die naturally in a world still free from Trisolaris rather than skip ahead to doomsday. Because of this, only researchers and certain high-value staff make use of cryogenics to skip through time.
Cosmic sociology
[edit]The study of theoretical interactions between cosmic civilizations. This area of study is first proposed by the character Ye Wenjie in conversation with future Wallfacer Luo Ji. Ye Wenjie proposes two axioms of cosmic sociology: "First: Survival is the primary need of civilization. Second: Civilization continuously grows and expands, but the total matter in the universe remains constant."[10] After becoming a Wallfacer, Luo Ji uses the axioms provided by Ye Wenjie to invent the dark-forest theory of the universe and the idea of dark-forest deterrence to stop the Trisolaran invasion.[11]
Analysis
[edit]Polish science fiction critic Wojciech Orliński argued that the trilogy represents Liu Cixin's endorsement of concepts of world government, consequentialism as well as tacit approval of "China's surveillance and control society".[12]
American journalist and writer Evan Lambert was critical of Liu Cixin's perceived sexism, which was predicated in the author's view that "women need the logic of men to balance them and temper their irrationality." He cited the author's characterization of Ye Wenjie as a "quasi-villain" due to her curiosity with alien species and her depiction as untrustworthy, incompetent and irrational. Lambert was also critical of the novels for what he regarded as its "thinly-drawn" characters. Lambert praised the Netflix television adaptation for addressing the source material's perceived sexism by recharacterizing Ye Wenji as an antihero and replacing the main character Wang Miao with two new female characters.[13]
University of Liverpool Chinese senior lecturer Aiqing Wang has argued that Liu Cixin's trilogy does not promote sexism and chauvinism. She cited the first novel Three Body Problem's depiction of the equal participation of both genders in science and its acknowledgement of the disparate mindsets of males and females. Wang also cited the allusion to "feminised masculinity" in the third novel Death's End. However, she conceded that the trilogy contained depictions of gender stereotypes, with female characters often being characterised as "delicate and soft."[14]
Adaptations
[edit]The Three-Body Problem is an indefinitely postponed Chinese science fiction 3D film,[15] adapted from The Three-Body Problem, directed by Fanfan Zhang, and starring Feng Shaofeng and Zhang Jingchu.[16][17][18]
A Chinese Minecraft machinima animated series based on the trilogy began releasing on February 27, 2014.[19]
Waterdrop, a 2015 Chinese short film based on The Dark Forest.
A Chinese animated series based on The Dark Forest aired from December 10, 2022, to March 25, 2023.[20]
A Chinese live-action series based on The Three-Body Problem aired from January 15 to February 3, 2023.[21]
A live-action, English-language series based on the trilogy premiered on Netflix on March 21, 2024, with David Benioff, D. B. Weiss, and Alexander Woo as showrunners.[22]
A 3-part documentary series entitled Rendezvous with the Future which explores the science behind Liu Cixin's science fiction was produced by BBC Studios and released by Bilibili in China in November 2022.[23] The series includes an extensive interview with Liu Cixin and covers many ideas featured in the Remembrance of Earth's Past such as: messaging extraterrestrial civilisations; gravitational wave transmitter; dark forest hypothesis; space elevator; artificial hibernation; fusion drive; and circumsolar particle accelerator.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Credited as Cixin Liu in the English editions
- ^ The Three-Body Problem (Remembrance of Earth's Past Book 1. Tor Books. 11 November 2014. Retrieved September 5, 2019.
- ^ Liu, Cixin (7 May 2014). "The Worst of All Possible Universes and the Best of All Possible Earths: Three Body and Chinese Science Fiction". Tor.com. Retrieved 8 May 2014.
- ^ "Three-Body Introduction". Archived from the original on 2015-03-03.
- ^ a b Liu, Ken. "Three Body". Retrieved September 5, 2019.
- ^ Liu, Cixin (20 September 2016). Death's End. Macmillan. ISBN 9781466853454. Retrieved September 5, 2019.
{{cite book}}
:|website=
ignored (help) - ^ Andrew Liptak (19 October 2018). "How a fan fiction for Cixin Liu's Three-Body Problem became an official novel". The Verge.
- ^ Liu, Cixin (2014). The Three-Body Problem. Translated by Liu, Ken. New York: Tor Books. ISBN 978-1-466-85344-7.
- ^ Liu, Cixin (2015). The Dark Forest. Translated by Martinsen, Joel. New York: Tor Books. ISBN 978-1-466-85343-0.
- ^ Liu, Cixin (2017). Death's End. Translated by Liu, Ken. New York: Tor Books. ISBN 978-0-765-37710-4.
- ^ Liu, Cixin (2019). The Dark Forest. Translated by Martinsen, Joel. New York: Tor Books. p. 13. ISBN 978-0-7653-8669-4.
- ^ Liu, Cixin (2019). The Dark Forest. Translated by Martinsen, Joel. New York: Tor Books. pp. 479–512. ISBN 978-0-7653-8669-4.
- ^ Orliński, Wojciech (20 October 2020). "Wymordować milionik czy dwa? Bywa, trudno. Chiński pogląd na światowy ład wkrótce rozpropaguje Netflix" [Murder a million or two? Sometimes, it's difficult. China's view of world order will soon be popularized by Netflix]. Gazeta Wyborcza.
- ^ Lambert, Evan (April 2, 2024). "How Netflix's '3 Body Problem' Fixed the Book's Sexism Issue". Thought Catalog. Archived from the original on April 5, 2024. Retrieved April 28, 2024.
- ^ Wang, Aiqing (9 October 2021). "Feminist Discussions on The Remembrance of Earth's Past Trilogy". Humanus. 20 (2). Padang, Indonesia: Centre for Humanity Studies, State University of Padang: 124–138. doi:10.24036/humanus.v20i2.113795. Retrieved 28 April 2024.
- ^ "三体 的海报". movie.douban.com (in Chinese). douban.com. Retrieved June 10, 2015.
- ^ "三体 (2017)". movie.douban.com (in Chinese). douban.com. Retrieved June 24, 2016.
- ^ "三体 (2017)". movie.mtime.com (in Chinese). Mtime.com Inc. Archived from the original on February 7, 2019. Retrieved June 24, 2016.
- ^ CaixinOnline (June 23, 2016). "Premiere of Film based on Acclaimed Sci-fi Novel 'The Three-Body Problem' Pushed Back until 2017". english.entgroup.cn. Retrieved June 24, 2015.
- ^ "科幻巨著《三体》被动画化,前几集令人绝望,后面堪称神作!". Sohu.com (in Chinese). 7 February 2018. Retrieved 23 January 2021.
- ^ Yuanyuan, Zhao (December 13, 2022). "Mixed reaction for animated adaptation of science-fiction hit 'The Three-Body Problem'". thechinaproject.com. Retrieved January 19, 2023.
- ^ "Chinese TV Series Based on "The Three Body Problem" to Premiere Sunday". www.pandaily.com. Retrieved 2022-01-15.
- ^ Otterson, Joe (September 1, 2020). "'Three-Body Problem' Series From David Benioff, D.B. Weiss, Alexander Woo Set at Netflix". Variety.
- ^ "Rendezvous with the Future". Bilibili. 2022.