Penrose, the psychiatrist in Ballard's fictional French business park, believes there's a science to it: "Part of the mind atrophies. A moral calculus that took thousands of years to develop starts to wither from neglect. Once you dispense with morality the important decisions become a matter of aesthetics. You've entered an adolescent world where you define yourself by the kind of trainers you wear."
Ballard isn't the only writer to explore these themes. Jingoism at the backyard level is the target in TC Boyle's Tortilla Curtain. Neal Stephanson wrote about "burbclaves," lots of franchised nations in suburbia. Octavia Butler's Parable of the Sower takes place in a walled Los Angeles suburb. Invisible Cities by Italo Calvino sees housing communities optimistically as chocolate boxes. Then again, every example comes from the main character's imagination. Here are several examples stranger than fiction: READ


