The Bicentennial Man
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| Author | Isaac Asimov |
|---|---|
| Country | |
| Language | English |
| Series | Robot Series |
| Genre(s) | science fiction short story |
| Published in | Stellar-2 |
| Publisher | Ballantine Books |
| Media type | Book |
| Publication date | February 1976 |
| Preceded by | —That Thou art Mindful of Him |
| Followed by | Mother Earth |
The Bicentennial Man is a novella in the Robot Series by Isaac Asimov. The story formed the basis of the novel The Positronic Man (1993), co-written with Robert Silverberg, and the 1999 film Bicentennial Man, starring Robin Williams.
The original story was awarded the Hugo Award for best science fiction novella of 1976.
In the twenty-first century the creation of the positronic brain leads to the development of robot laborers and revolutionizes life on Earth. But to the Martin family, their household robot NDR-113 is more than a mechanical servant. "Andrew" has become a trusted friend, a confidant, and a member of the Martin family.
The story is told from the perspective of Andrew (later known as Andrew Martin), an NDR-series robot owned by the Martin family, a departure from the usual practice by U.S. Robots and Mechanical Men of leasing robots.
Andrew's initial experiences with the Martin family are replete with awkward moments which demonstrate his lack of socialization. However, he is much better with inanimate objects and animals and begins to display sapient characteristics (such as creativity; emotion; self-awareness) traditionally the province of humans. He is taken off his mundane household duties, for which he was intended, and allowed to pursue his creativity, making a fortune by selling his creations.
Andrew seeks legal protection stemming from his initial creative output and eventual full recognition as a human, by gradually replacing his robotic components with organic ones, and citing the process as a transformation from robot to human. Succeeding generations of the Martin family assist him in his quest for humanity, but each is limited to what degree they are prepared to acknowledge. Only when Andrew allows his positronic brain to "decay," thereby willfully abandoning his immortality, is he finally accepted as a human being. This event takes place on the two-hundredth anniversary of his activation, hence the title.
This story is set within Asimov's Foundation universe, which also includes his earlier Susan Calvin positronic robot tales. It is clearly set a number of centuries prior to the events of his novelette "Mother Earth" and the novel The Caves of Steel, during a period in which the Spacer worlds have yet to turn against the people of the Earth, and in which the U.S. Robots corporation is still active.
| Before: —That Thou art Mindful of Him |
Included in: The Complete Robot Robot Visions |
Series: Robot Series Robot Visions |
Followed by: Mother Earth |
| The Complete Robot by Isaac Asimov |
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A Boy's Best Friend • Sally • Someday • Point of View • Think! • True Love • Robot AL-76 Goes Astray • Victory Unintentional • Stranger in Paradise • Light Verse • Segregationist • Robbie • Let's Get Together • Mirror Image • The Tercentenary Incident • First Law • Runaround • Reason • Catch that Rabbit • Liar! • Satisfaction Guaranteed • Lenny • Galley Slave • Little Lost Robot • Risk • Escape! • Evidence • The Evitable Conflict • Feminine Intuition • —That Thou art Mindful of Him • The Bicentennial Man |
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| Robot Series: | |
| Empire Series: | |
| Foundation Series: |
Prelude to Foundation ♦ Forward the Foundation |
| Lucky Starr series (as Paul French): | |
| Other science fiction novels: |
The End of Eternity ♦ Fantastic Voyage ♦ The Gods Themselves ♦ Fantastic Voyage II: Destination Brain ♦ Nemesis ♦ Nightfall ♦ The Ugly Little Boy ♦ The Positronic Man |
| Mystery novels: | |