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1Creator/BruceSterling's ''Schismatrix'' is to ''Literature/{{Neuromancer}}'' what ''Literature/{{Gormenghast}}'' is to ''Literature/TheLordOfTheRings'', at least as far as its place in the {{Cyberpunk}} canon is concerned.
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3In the 23rd Century, Abelard Lindsay is about to kill himself in the name of humanity.
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5There are two major superpowers in the solar system -- the Shapers, who use genetic engineering, psychology and conditioning techniques to improve human potential, and the Mechanists, who believe in cybernetics.
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7Lindsay's family, aristocrats in the Mare Serenitatus Circumlunar Corporate Republic, one of the crumbling space colonies orbiting the moon, sent him to the Shapers for [[ManipulativeBastard diplomat training]], along with his lower-class friend Constantine, who was trained in genetic engineering.
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9When he came back he found that the Mechanists were on top. Being a political liability, his family placed him under house arrest and married him off to a mechanist 50 years his senior. Lindsay, Constantine, and Lindsay's lover Vera had decided to stage a coup in the name of the eternal human verities, the latter two choosing to kill themselves to make a point.
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11Of course it doesn't go quite right. While Vera kills herself, Lindsay's family interferes in his own suicide attempt, only for his uncle to fall victim to a booby-trap Constantine had placed on Vera's body, in case Lindsay chickened out.
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13In the ensuing scandal, Lindsay is exiled to a decaying colony, the Mare Tranquillitatus People's Circumlunar Zaibatsu, which recognises a single human right: The right to death.
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15Lindsay politely declines, and decides to be a ManipulativeBastard instead.
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17The story that follows can only be described as "epic".
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19!! This novel displays the following tropes:
20* AccidentalArt - the fate of Esair XII when the Investors arrive.
21* AlienArtsAreAppreciated - subverted and averted, in that order, without even mentioning the literature on the [untranslatable]. (Though according to the story ''Spider Rose'', the latter would be ''very'' appreciated.)
22* AlienGeometry - Implied to be one of the horrors in the Arena. Though it doesn't help that at the time, the narrator's mind was completely destroyed by drugs.
23* ArtificialHuman - Shaper "Antibiotics", Kitsune [[spoiler: and her children]]
24%%* ArtificialLimbs
25* BrainInAJar - the "wireheads", or more politely, "senior Mechanists", apparently one of the more successful forms of life extension
26* BrownNote - The literature on the [untranslatable].
27%%* CoolShip - The ''Red Consensus''
28* CyberneticsEatYourSoul - alluded to by some Shapers, but averted, particularly with the Mech journalist, playwright [[spoiler: and later, Wirehead]] Fyodor Ryuumin. Subverted with Spider Rose and the Zen Serotonin clade, who dampen their emotions deliberately with drugs.
29* DesignerBabies - the Shapers
30* DistantFinale - the short story ''Sunken Gardens'', though it was written before Schismatrix itself.
31* ElaborateUndergroundBase - not entirely true, but the Mavrides Family asteroid bears most of the hallmarks.
32%%* EnergyEconomy
33* ExoticEquipment - [[spoiler: Kitsune eventually grows into a space station. With [[{{Squick}} unusual]] furniture.]]
34* EldritchAbomination - in the final section of the novel, [[spoiler: more or less completely inverted with the Presence, which turns out to be a bit happy-go-lucky.]]
35* FailedFutureForecast - The ''Red Consensus'' is mentioned to have been owned by the USSR
36* FanOfThePast - Lindsay, to begin with, along with the Preservationist faction he had a hand in founding.
37* FleshVersusSteel - the Shapers vs the Mechanists.
38* FutureImperfect - Characters live long enough to see this happen to their own life.
39* GenreShift - the earlier short stories portray a WorldHalfEmpty focused on alien horror, but ''Twenty Evocations'' is more about weirdness and future shock. Schismatrix itself is set in a WorldHalfFull with a good dose of comedy.
40* GoodIsOldFashioned - Inverted, utterly. For all that he starts the story as a FanOfThePast, Lindsay spends the entire story adapting himself to the changing situation. Antagonist Constantine on the other hand sticks to his preferred habits.
41%%* TheHecateSisters - Nora Mavrides, [[spoiler: Kitsune]], Alexandrina Tyler
42* HumanPopsicle - those targeted by Cataclyst ice assassins.
43%%* IndyPloy - roughly half of Lindsay's schemes
44* InsignificantLittleBluePlanet - By choice. Earth's government [[ScienceIsBad blamed science]] for a massive ecological collapse, and those who escaped into space agreed to stay away.
45* InsufficientlyAdvancedAlien - the Investors are implied to have bought or stolen all of their starships
46* LastNameBasis - Lindsay and Constantine in particular.
47* ManipulativeBastard - Abelard Lindsay and the other Shaper-trained diplomats. Lindsay's rival Constantine is this as well in spite of being untrained.
48* MayDecemberRomance - Lindsay and his first wife, Alexandrina Tyler, who is fifty years older than he is.
49* TheNeutralZone - inside the People's Circumlunar Zaibatsu, setting foot in the demilitarised zone leads to instant death
50* NoTranshumanismAllowed - The Neotenic Cultural Republic, which exiles all its citizens when they reach the age of 60, though the residents don't mind as they see it as just a temporary phase in their centuries long lifespan once outside the colony. In the rest of the book, this is throughly averted, as people do anything and everything imaginable to their bodies, to the point where many are not even recognizably human anymore.
51* OlderThanTheyLook - Due to advanced genetic engineering technology, anyone with a little money is essentially immortal, so there is no relation whatsoever between looks and actual age.
52%%* OneWorldOrder - Earth.
53%%* OnlyElectricSheepAreCheap
54* OrganicTechnology - the Shapers, to a degree
55* PlanetOfHats - though we never get to see their homeworld, the Investors as a species care for nothing but a good deal.
56%%* PlayingWithSyringes - the Shapers
57* SexBot - subverted with Kitsune, a human SexBot created by the Shapers. Having what amounts to an extra pleasure centre where her womb should be causes all of her emotions to be overshadowed by lust, but rather than turning her into "a blank-eyed erotic animal", it resulted in an utterly pragmatic genius.
58* ShoutOut - mostly internal. Characters from the short stories tend to appear all over the main novel.
59* SpaceAmish - Deconstructed in Earth's civilisation, which chose stability over development. It appears only once, from a distance, and is portrayed as an utter CrapsackWorld.
60** Subverted with the Investors, who are equally stable due to being interested only in profit, and nevertheless have FTL and the best technology they can buy. [[spoiler: Also subverted by the Swarm, who chose to maintain stability by turning into a mostly non-sentient space-borne HiveMind.]]
61%%* SpacePirates - The Fortuna Miners' Democracy
62%%* SpaceStation - Almost every location in the book
63* SceneryGorn - The Mare Tranquillatus People's Circumlunar Zaibatsu
64* SchizoTech - the Mavrides' clan live inside an asteroid full of OrganicTechnology, but sew their plastic space suits by hand. [[spoiler: and defend themselves from pirates with slingshots, flails and candles.]]
65* TheSingularity - implied to happen to most species that don't kill themselves off
66* SoundtrackDissonance - "...that most ancient of Japanese instruments, the synthesizer."
67* StarfishAliens - The Gasbags, one of whom kills itself when it sees a solar flare that is somehow blasphemous in shape.
68%%* StepfordSmiler - Everyone who practices Zen Serotonin.
69%%* SuicideIsPainless - "Do you wish to claim your civil right?"
70* TechnologyMarchesOn - cassette tapes are ubiquitous
71* {{Terraform}} - the eventual goal of the Posthumanist clique is terraforming Mars
72* TimeAbyss - the Investors, and to a lesser extent all the characters, who indulge in life-extension techniques. [[spoiler: Simon Afriel's conversation with the Swarm.]]
73* TimeSkip - The first four chapters take place near continuously. However, the rest of the book time skips like crazy. By the end of the book, at least 171 years have gone by.
74* UsedFuture - though not the case everywhere in the solar system, the Lunar Concatenate is in a pretty bad way, and the ''Red Consensus'' makes the [[Franchise/StarWars Millennium Falcon]] look like something built by Literature/TheCulture.
75%%* VictoriousChildhoodFriend - or more correctly, [[spoiler: Victorious Young-Adulthood ''Wife'']]
76* VillainsBlendInBetter - Inverted. Taking on local colour is one thing that Lindsay is ''extremely'' good at.
77* WeaponOfMassDestruction - Due to the fragility of space colonies, most weapons are treated this way.
78* WeWillNotUsePhotoshopInTheFuture - averted. Real-time videophones automatically clean up whoever's at the other end.

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