The Machine Stops
By E. M. Forster
Category
LiteratureRecommended by
"The Machine Stops" by E.M. Forster is a dystopian science fiction novella set in a future where humankind is completely reliant on a machine that provides for their every need. The story follows Vashti, a woman living in this technologically advanced society, who resides in a subterranean cell and relies on the machine for all aspects of her life.
The machine provides communication, sustenance, and entertainment to its users, who have become physically and emotionally disconnected from one another. People live in isolated cells and communicate solely through the machine, which mediates their interactions. Vashti's son, Kuno, believes that there must be more to life than the machine and desires a physical connection with others.
Kuno's rebellious beliefs lead him to leave his cell and travel to the surface, where he experiences nature and encounters primitive humans who live outside the machine's control. However, the machine eventually detects Kuno and shuts down his access to its functions, leaving him stranded and desperate.
As the machine starts to falter, Vashti becomes increasingly reliant on it, fearing life without its control and convenience. But the machine’s breakdown becomes inevitable, causing chaos and the collapse of the entire technocratic society. Vashti and others are left to face the terrifying reality of having to forge human connections and rediscover the natural world.
"The Machine Stops" is a thought-provoking exploration of the dangers of overreliance on technology and the importance of human connection. In a world where convenience and isolation consume society, Forster warns of the potential consequences that accompany such complacency and detachment.
The machine provides communication, sustenance, and entertainment to its users, who have become physically and emotionally disconnected from one another. People live in isolated cells and communicate solely through the machine, which mediates their interactions. Vashti's son, Kuno, believes that there must be more to life than the machine and desires a physical connection with others.
Kuno's rebellious beliefs lead him to leave his cell and travel to the surface, where he experiences nature and encounters primitive humans who live outside the machine's control. However, the machine eventually detects Kuno and shuts down his access to its functions, leaving him stranded and desperate.
As the machine starts to falter, Vashti becomes increasingly reliant on it, fearing life without its control and convenience. But the machine’s breakdown becomes inevitable, causing chaos and the collapse of the entire technocratic society. Vashti and others are left to face the terrifying reality of having to forge human connections and rediscover the natural world.
"The Machine Stops" is a thought-provoking exploration of the dangers of overreliance on technology and the importance of human connection. In a world where convenience and isolation consume society, Forster warns of the potential consequences that accompany such complacency and detachment.
Share This Book 📚
More Books in Literature

The Prince
Nicolo Machiavelli

Jonathan Livingston Seagull
Richard Bach

Letters to a Young Poet
Rainer Maria Rilke

The Alchemist
Paulo Coelho

The Razor's Edge
W. Somerset Maugham

100 Best-Loved Poems
Philip Smith

A Time for New Dreams
Ben Okri

A Wrinkle in Time
Madeleine L'Engle

A Year with Rumi
Coleman Barks

Anna Karenina
Leo Tolstoy

B
Sarah Kay

Bird by Bird
Anne Lamott

Catch-22
Joseph Heller

Crime and Punishment
Fyodor Dostoevsky

David Foster Wallace
David Foster Wallace

Demons
Fyodor Dostoevsky

Draft No. 4
John McPhee

East of Eden
John Steinbeck

Essays and Aphorisms
Arthur Schopenhauer

Essays and Lectures
Ralph Waldo Emerson

Ficciones
Jorge Luis Borges

Four Quartets
TS Eliot

Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Gabriel Garcia Marquez

Goethe's Poems and Aphorisms
Goethe

Graphs, Maps, Trees
Franco Moretti

Great Short Poems
Paul Negri

Hamlet
William Shakespeare

Hyperbole and a Half
Allie Brosh

I Heard God Laughing
Hafiz

I Wrote This Book Because I Love You
Tim Kreider
Popular Books Recommended by Great Minds 📚

Dune
Frank Herbert

The Ascent of Money
Niall Ferguson

1984
George Orwell

Principles
Ray Dalio

Mindset
Carol Dweck

The Three Body Problem
Cixin Liu

Red Notice
Bill Browder

Against The Gods
Peter Bernstein

How to Change Your Mind
Michael Pollan

Bad Blood
John Carreyrou

Hopping Over The Rabbit Hole
Anthony Scaramucci

Hillbilly Elegy
J.D. Vance

The Sovereign Individual
James Dale Davidson & William Rees-Mogg

Economics in One Lesson
Henry Hazlitt

The Ride of a Lifetime
Bob Iger

Range
David Epstein

Titan
Ron Chernow

The Lean Startup
Eric Reis

Antifragile
Nassim Nicholas Taleb

The Holy Bible
Various

Who We Are and How We Got Here
David Reich

The Courage To Be Disliked
Ichiro Kishimi

When Breath Becomes Air
Paul Kalanithi

Lying
Sam Harris

Shoe Dog
Phil Knight

The Innovators Dilemma
Clayton Christensen

Trailblazer
Marc Benioff

The Outsiders
William Thorndike

Crossing the Chasm
Geoffrey Moore

Man's Search for Meaning
Viktor Frankl