The Concentration City

The Concentration City

"The Concentration City" is a dystopian short story by British author J. G. Ballard, first published, under the title "Build-Up" in New Worlds volume 19 number 55 in January 1957. It was reprinted in the collections Billennium and Chronopolis and later, under its revised title, in The Disaster Area[1] and The Complete Short Stories of J. G. Ballard: Volume 1.

Setting and plot

"The Concentration City" is set in a "city" encompassing everything in known existence to its inhabitants. The districts comprises endless streets and buildings and seemingly infinitely high and low levels, or floors, with few trees and little wildlife. Cubic space is in shortage and expensive; high speed transportation is in use, but it is implied that many people do not find the need to leave their particular area. The people do not know what lies beyond the endless urban expansion, but seem to care little, and generally assume that there are just endless levels and districts that have existed forever.

The short story follows a physics student named Franz, who devotes his time to the concept of "free space" – the idea that somewhere, there must be just infinite amounts of space, a concept labelled as nonsensical by most of the other city's inhabitants. He also wishes to develop a machine for flight – a relatively unknown theory due to the complete lack of partially open spaces.

Eventually, Franz decides to travel on one of the high-speed rail coaches for as long as possible in one direction in order to discover what lies beyond the urban zoning and trying to find free space. The story ends when Franz after ten days of travelling realises that the coach is travelling back in the opposite direction. When he is finally stopped by the authorities, he notices the date of a calendar is unchanged from when he set forth travelling. Franz discovers that if one keeps travelling forward, one finally ends back in the same place at the same time.

Similar Conceptions

Similar conceptions litter speculative fiction, but two distinct types of 'infinite cities' are noteworthy:

  • "Diaspar", from Arthur C. Clarke's The City and the Stars, said to contain all wonders and marvels: a possible influence on this city
  • The City from the Tsutomo Nihei's Blame! manga - a near infinite structure larger than the solar system, finite, but unbounded. The exterior is also the goal of the protagonist.

References


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