Skip navigation
London Review of Books Christmas Books

Vaguely on the Run subscriber-only content

Sam Gilpin

  • Super-Cannes by J.G. Ballard

‘Here, at the newly named Antibes-les-Pins, will arise the first “intelligent city” of the Riviera,’ J.G. Ballard wrote in ‘Under the Voyeur’s Gaze’, an essay that appears in A User’s Guide to the Millennium, a collection of his journalism. He went on:

The ten thousand inhabitants in their high-tech apartments and offices will serve as an ‘ideas laboratory’ for the cities of the future, where ‘technology will be placed at the service of conviviality’. Fibre optic cables and telemetric networks will transmit databanks and information services to each apartment, along with the most advanced fire, safety and security measures. To cap it all, in case the physical and mental strain of actually living in this electronic paradise proves too much, there will be individual medical tele-surveillance in direct contact with the nearest hospital.

The words in quotes presumably come from the publicity brochure for Antibes-les-Pins, but you can almost hear the glee in Ballard’s dry, clipped prose as he picks out phrases which might have originated in one of his own technological fantasies – the ‘intelligent city’ and the ‘ideas laboratory’ appear again in Super-Cannes. Perhaps even more Ballardian is the promise of psychiatric invigilation, which also finds a place in his latest novel.

subscriber-only content Subscribers to the print edition can log in to view the entire article. For information about subscribing to the London Review of Books click here. This article is available for purchase online. Buy this article.

Sam Gilpin is writing his first novel.

LRB cover artwork

From the archive

Remember me
Adam Phillips on Bret Easton Ellis

Slapping the Clammy Flab
John Lanchester on Hannibal by Thomas Harris

One Big Murder Mystery
Adam Shatz on the Algerian army’s leading novelist

Onion-Pilfering
Brian Dillon: Michael Ondaatje

Read it on the autobahn
Robert Macfarlane: Vanishing Victorians