Encyclopedic in scope,
VAS insists that the reality of everyday life is composed of a collage of evolving stories based on facts that continually change as the assumptions of sciences, technologies, economies, politics, belief systems and other frames of reference change In
Edwin A. Abbott’s
Flatland, Square, a two-dimensional figure drawn on a flat piece of paper, has a difficult time imaging what the phrase “Upward, not Northward” can mean. The character Square in
VAS, uses this question as a metaphor for his difficulty in understanding what a post-biological future might mean to biological humans who are increasingly confronted by decisions over how to manipulate their bodies and the bodies of others that earlier generations would be hard-pressed to imagine. This existential question is the main theme of the novel. It is informed by the ability of life sciences, information sciences, histories of health care systems, government, and commercial interests to equate the body with information that can be edited and rearranged. The Flatland of
VAS is a society where biology is no longer destiny as it was for previous generations, in that its inhabitants can use transplants, pharmaceuticals, plastic surgery and other body modifications to alter many facts of life that once would have been determined by nature. Technologies like synthetic hearts extend life by allowing people to live as cyborgs, while pregnancies can be terminated and the elderly can be euthanized. Technologies such as genetic engineering and in-vitro fertilization can bring into existence creatures and plants that previously could not exist in nature such as tomatoes that carry the genes of deep-diving fish to make them less susceptible to freezing, or cows with human genes that allow their organs to be transplanted into humans. For the old-body inhabitants of Flatland, the increasing malleability of bodies, and their translation into code, creates a new relationship between the self and the body, and the bodies and selves of others that is unsettling in that it becomes harder to tell where one’s self ends and the bodies of others begin (as it is impossible to define a single word without using other words). Considering the bodies and parts of humans, plants, and animals as a text that can be edited, rearranged, and patented, is a second major theme of
VAS. As such,
VAS places an emphasis on the textual nature of the body, and the material nature of text, and uses the body of the book itself to develop this theme. It explores the role of language in developing these new conceptions of the body, and how the definitions of words like 'birth,' 'father,' 'daughter,' and 'death' evolve as the contexts in which they are used change. It also considers the ramifications for daily life as both bodies and texts become commodities under the language of the law in that new plants, animals, and human enhancements can be patented and their genetic code copyrighted. Values and Rules are socially constructed:
VAS develops the theme of the ordinary layperson trying to navigate the glut of a new information landscape, and the small steps by which the world it describes is becoming the new natural (flat). To do so, it draws upon a number of histories, such as the history of dissection, eugenics, and animal experimentation, and draws a parallel between attempts to preserve racial purity and linguistic purity. It juxtaposes historical periods and figures to explore the ideologies and biases of science, consumerism, fashion, religion and art, as well as those of the author himself in the writing of the novel
VAS: An Opera in Flatland. The novel attempts to show how it models the world as it engages in modeling. It draws readers attention to its own epistemological ties to language and genre conventions. Far from nostalgia for a previous era,
VAS uses the interrelationship between its narrative and book design to integrate poststructuralist theory with its subjects and themes to combine in a new kind of literature that can contain the contradictions of the posthuman. This theme contains within it the relationships between genders, and the dynamics of domestic politics, especially representations of masculinity, and the erosion of patriarchy. ==Style==