46 pages • 1 hour read
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David Bowden’s Between the City and the City, the preeminent text on Orciny, has been banned by the establishment as dangerous and dismissed by academia as deeply flawed scholarship. However, it’s also the source of great interest to Mahalia Geary. She studies it closely until she is lured into its fictional mysteries. After Geary’s murder, the text becomes one of Borlú’s primary clues as he struggles to reconstruct Geary’s thought process and track down her killer. Despite its false premise, its subject matter is still deemed too threatening for public consumption. As it happens, banned books in Besźel and Ul Qoma are not unusual; the library of the Beszqoma Solidarity Front contains a trove of banned materials. Between the City and the City is symbolic of all knowledge considered dangerous. Entrenched power structures will always attempt to censor material that poses a threat to the status quo, whether it be a text about the legacy of racism, alternative lifestyles, or a mythical city.
Bowden’s murder weapon, a relic from the Bol Ye’an dig site, is an ancient, corroded, and apparently non-functional object. When he tries to fire at Borlú, its patchworked mechanism only clicks, and he only managed to murder Geary with it by using it to bludgeon her. The weapon, supposedly an Orciny artifact, is reputed to have mysterious powers, but like all of Orciny mythology, it’s a lie. It’s nothing more than a blunt object, a relic that has no power except as a tool of death. The object even breaks when Bowden uses it, evidence of its frailty and very un-magical nature. It’s meant for study and archival purposes, but when Bowden uses it for something else, he seals his own fate.
From the outset, China Miéville clarifies the importance of borders to his world-building. They not only separate Besźel and Ul Qoma, but they dictate people’s perception and behavior. They result in divergent languages and cultures. They become in effect metaphysical walls, dividing neighbors, isolating the cities from each other’s diversity, and fomenting distrust. It’s not a stretch to see real-world parallels. Countries guard arbitrary lines with substantial military resources, keeping outsiders out and prosecuting those who cross. As in Miéville’s fictional cities, border crossers are deemed criminals, “breachers” who violate the sanctity of sovereign territory, even if that breach is necessary to escape persecution and death. Miéville suggests that borders serve only to divide us, encouraging us to see each other not as fellow human beings but as foreign bodies on the wrong side of an imaginary line.
The City and the City exudes a Cold War era atmosphere: Besźel street names closely mimic the German language (Strasse), infrastructure and technology are old and crumbling, and the bureaucracy is deeply layered. As countries become authoritarian, systems of bureaucracy must be put into place to enforce laws and maintain established power structures. This bureaucracy is most evident in two examples: the Oversight Committee and Breach. When Borlú decides to transfer Geary’s murder case to Breach authority, he must make an official appeal—in person and with detailed paperwork—to the Oversight Committee. The committee has enormous power both in law enforcement and civic affairs, and no substantial moves are made without its approval. The other example of bureaucracy is Breach, a secret police force established to enforce borders and spy on the population, to ensure no one even looks into the other city. Bureaucracies are a hallmark of big governments (China, the former Soviet Union, the United States). They impose obstacles and generate reams of paperwork that often serve as little more than a mechanism by which to snoop on the public.
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