Punkapalooza
The word Lollapalooza is an American idiom originally meaning “remarkable or wonderful person or thing.” I think Cyberpunk is a remarkable thing. It was just the beginning to a change in the way writers and readers viewed the science fiction genre.
In this post I’ll be discussing all the other “punk” derivatives and what I think is wonderful, or not so wonderful about them.
Postcyberpunk
Lawrence Person wrote in an essay he posted to the Internet forum Slashdot:
Postcyberpunk uses the same immersive world-building technique [as cyberpunk], but features different characters, settings, and, most importantly, makes fundamentally different assumptions about the future. Far from being alienated loners, postcyberpunk characters are frequently integral members of society (i.e., they have jobs). They live in futures that are not necessarily dystopic (indeed, they are often suffused with an optimism that ranges from cautious to exuberant), but their everyday lives are still impacted by rapid technological change and an omnipresent computerized infrastructure.
The idea that cyberpunk has changed because the authors that read the original cyberpunk novels, went on to use the genre and improve upon it is amazing to me. I’m not sure how deeply I would go into researching such things, but it’s certainly enjoyable to read what others have come up with in regards to the changes in science fiction. I’d say this sort of evolution is to be expected. Much like technology itself is always advancing; we see a thing then we improve upon it.
To quote Wikipedia for examples:
Good examples are Neal Stephenson’s The Diamond Age and Bruce Sterling’s Holy Fire. In television, Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex has been called “the most interesting, sustained postcyberpunk media work in existence.”[4] In 2007, SF writers James Patrick Kelly and John Kessel published Rewired: the Post-Cyberpunk Anthology. Like all categories discerned within science fiction, the boundaries of postcyberpunk are likely to be fluid or ill defined.[5]
Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex has to be my all time favorite television show. Hands down. It explores so very many aspects of what could happen if technology were able to take over our lives and minds so easily. And it does it WELL.
Cyberprep
I mention Cyberprep only because any punk worth his salt would scoff at the use of the word “preppy”. Cyberprep is the opposite of cyberpunk in terms of quality of life. Instead of dark and dangerous, life is happy and bright. Cyber technology is used to upload one’s awareness for leisure or recreation. Most definitely not the gritty cyberpunk I know and love. If anything gang wars in cyberprep would be like West Side Story with cybernetics. That image alone is horrifying. Moving on!
Biopunk
The name should say it all, but if not then I’ll add a bit of detail. Biopunk focuses on the underground biotechnology revolution that was thought to be a major part of the 21st century. Biopunk focuses on what would happen if synthetic biology was used to modify humans instead of straight technology. Usually these worlds have totalitarian governments or mega-corporations involved to muck up the works. Biopunk is admittedly less popular than cyberpunk, but is just as firmly planted in modern technology as its predecessor.
A series of books that can be describe as Biopunk are the Xenogenesis trilogy by Octavia E. Butler. Movies of note for biopunk leanings are the Fly, Jurassic Park (huh!), and Gattaca (a personal favorite of mine).
Clockpunk
Clockpunk was a term coined by a role playing system named GURPS. Much like Steampunk, Clockpunk shows advanced technology set in a post-modern world with the exception of using springs and cogs as opposed to steam.
This one doesn’t strike me as particularly more fascinating than Steampunk. I suppose I just don’t have the appreciation of clocks that some people do. I like my digital alarm, okay?
Dieselpunk
The absolute first thing that should come to everyone’s mind is Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome, right? Actually, not so much. (Though anyone who doesn’t think of Mad Max is just out of touch. Why haven’t you seen this movie!?)
Dieselpunk has some Steampunk elements in it, but has progressed past steam to using petroleum as its primary source of power. Along with this there is a sort of modern noir setting to it that might remind you of Casablanca if they had laser beams. A good example of this would be the movie Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow. Another movie I enjoyed though I don’t think it did well in the box office.
I’ve not yet read a book with this theme that I can remember, but I will likely seek a few out to see how the genre holds up on the page.
Cyberpunk Wannabe Derivatives
Apparently these last few are not officially recognized sub-genres; they’re just made up terms by readers or even by authors in a tongue in cheek reference to their own work.
ElfpunkElfpunk was suggested as a subgenre of Urban Fantasy where elves and fairies are transplanted to modern day settings. One example that I know of is Laura K. Hamilton’s Merry Gentry series. Though if that series is like Anita Blake: Vampire Hunter, there are lots of blood, violence, violent sex and then some words of love tossed around as if they have any place in such a setting.
Er… what was I talking about?
MythpunkMythpunk takes myth and folklore, tosses it into a blender, then adds urban fantasy, a twist of some academic fantasy and pours it over the rocks of world building. Truly I’m not sure I understand the reasoning behind this particular title, except that it’s not using mythology, but rather myths, like the Rougarou in Louisiana, as its basis. Wikipedia lists Theodora Goss as a writer of Mythpunk.
Perhaps it’s time to expand my reading horizons and check this made up genre out.
NowpunkNowpunk is the most confusing of all the made up “punk” genres to me. I’ll quote from Wikipedia because I just can’t seem to wrap my head around it. It sounds like normal fiction to me. Perhaps someone out there can set me straight.
Nowpunk is a term sometimes applied to contemporary historical fiction set in the time period in which the fiction is being published.[21] The most noble example of the sub-genre in recent history is The Zenith Angle by notable cyberpunk author Bruce Sterling.[21] The Zenith Angle follows the story of a hacker whose life is changed by the September 11th, 2001 attacks.[22] What makes it nowpunk is that the story concerns the way the real world was actually being affected by a real event and that it was written as those changes were occurring, not afterwards, with the benefit of an historical perspective.
Like I said, sounds like… contemporary fiction to me. I think someone is splitting hairs, but that’s just me.
Now then, there is one final entry mentioned on the Cyberpunk derivatives page in Wikipedia, but as I’m not a horror fan, I’ll only mention its name. Splatterpunk. I don’t even want to know because that name alone squicks me.
Punkapalooza Wrap Up
So, all in all, Cyberpunk was the granddaddy to all of these other “punk” movements and yet it’s still the most popular, even with the postcyberpunk movement coming in to clean up after it.
Cyberpunk will likely always be my favorite science fiction genre just because it fascinates me. That humans can build things in order to interface with one another in a manner that we weren’t born with is fascinating and scary all in one. That’s one reason why I love science fiction. It’s not real, but you have to wonder if it couldn’t be possible sometime in the not to near future.
My next series of posts will deal with Fantasy, my all time favorite genre ever. I’ll have many more reading selections to offer in those posts because I’ve read much more fantasy than science fiction.
Not to worry gentle readers, I’ll be hitting on romance too. It’s one of my other favorite genres.
Author Notes
And finally, a note of apology. This post was supposed to be out last Monday and I had someone attempt to break into my house that afternoon while I was cooking dinner. I wasn’t in the right frame of mind to write anything that night, nor the next few nights. Thank you for your patience and understanding as I move forward in my attempts to make regular postings on this blog.
And, as always, thank you for stopping by to read, whoever you are.


Two Psychics, One Mega-Corp, All Around Bad Behavior
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