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"We follow the scientists around and look over their shoulders. They're watching their feet: provable mistakes are bad for them. We're looking as far ahead as we can, and we don't get penalized for mistakes."
- Larry Niven

Dead-Show  
  Forced reliving of memory and experience after death.  

Unlike any other.

They move, process obscurely—they exist here on this time-lost plain! And he understands with loathing that it is from them or those—machines or beings, he cannot tell—that the sustaining energy flows. It is their dark potency which has raised him from the patterns of the dust.

Hating them he hungers, would sway after them to suck his death-life, as a billion other remnants are yearning, dead sunflowers thirsting toward their black sun—but finds he cannot, can only crave helplessly as they recede.

They move, he perceives, toward those black distant cenotaphs, skeletal and alien, which alone break the dead horizon. What these can be, engines or edifices, is beyond his knowing. He strains sightlessly, sensing now a convergence, an inflowing as of departure like ants into no earthly nest. And at this he understands that the energy up-buoying him is sinking, is starting to ebb. The alien radiance that raised him is going, and he is guttering out. Do you know? he voicelessly cries after them, Do you know? Do you move oblivious among our agonies?

But he receives no answer, will never receive one; and as his tenuous structure fails he has consciousness only to wonder briefly what unimaginable errand brought such beings here to his dead cinder. Emissaries, he wonders, dwindling; explorers, engineers? Or is it possible that they are only sightseers? Idling among our ruins, perhaps even cognizant of the ghosts they raise to wail—turning us on, recreating our dead-show for their entertainment?

Shriveling, he watches them go in, taking with them his lacerating life, returning him to the void. Will they return? Or—his waning self forms one last desolation—have they returned already on their millennial tours? Has this recurred, to recur and recur again? Must he and all dead life be borne back each time helplessly to suffer, to jerk anew on the same knives and die again until another energy exhumes him for the next performance?

Let us die! But his decaying identity can no longer sustain protest, knows only that it is true, is unbearably all true, has all been done to him before and is all to do again and again and again without mercy forever.

Technovelgy from Her Smoke Rose Up Forever, by James Tiptree, Jr..
Published by Charterhouse in 1974
Additional resources -

Compare this to virtual reality from The Theatre and Its Double (1938) by Antonin Artaud, mental phantasmagoria from The Lotus-Engine (1940) by Raymond Z. Gallun, permanent hookup from Spectator Sport (1950) by John D. MacDonald, the Saga simulation from Arthur C. Clarke's 1956 novel The City and the Stars, the virtual matrix from The Judas Mandala (1982) by Damien Broderick, cyberspace from Burning Chrome (1982) by William Gibson and the metaverse from Snow Crash (1992) by Neal Stephenson. Note also the DreamTime Scleral Contact Lenses From The California Voodoo Game (1992) by Larry Niven (w/S. Barnes).

Compare to the life chamber from The Chamber of Life (1929) by G. Peyton Wertenbaker, the virtual assembly from If The Sun Died (1931) by R.F. Starzl and the holodeck from Encounter at Farpoint (1987) by David Gerrold.

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Additional resources:
  More Ideas and Technology from Her Smoke Rose Up Forever
  More Ideas and Technology by James Tiptree, Jr.
  Tech news articles related to Her Smoke Rose Up Forever
  Tech news articles related to works by James Tiptree, Jr.

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