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=== Inspiration === ''Neuromancer'' has many literary progenitors. Detective fiction, like the work of [[Raymond Chandler]], is frequently cited as an influence on ''Neuromancer.'' For example, critics note similarities between Gibson's Case and Chandler's [[Philip Marlowe]]: Case is described as a "cowboy" and a "detective" and is involved in a heist;{{Sfn|Nazare|2003|p=386}} Molly, the novel's primary female character, has connections to the "molls" of 1940s [[film noir]].{{Sfn|McCaffery|1991|pp=14–15}} Case's illegal practices, like theft and murder, situate him within a wider tradition of transgressive detectives, like the [[opiate]] addiction of [[Arthur Conan Doyle]]'s [[Sherlock Holmes]].{{Sfn|Myers|2001|p=889}} Gibson stated that the [[pulp noir]] core of the novel was key to engaging his readers, and cited the works of [[Dashiell Hammett]] and [[Robert Stone (novelist)|Robert Stone]] as major influences on its style.{{Sfn|Wallace-Wells|2014|p=215}}{{Efn|Robert Stone's work is associated with settings that included great social turbulence, most famously the Vietnam War.{{Sfn|Weber|2015}}}} For dialogue, the author incorporated late 1960s [[Toronto]] drug dealer and [[Motorcycle club|biker]] [[slang]] into the novel.{{Sfn|Whalen|1992|p=86}} Gibson's prose style—fast-paced, fragmented imagery—resembles the styles of [[William S. Burroughs]] and [[J. G. Ballard]].{{Sfn|Smith|2014|p=12}} Burroughs's ''[[Naked Lunch]]'' (1959) is frequently cited by critics as an influence on ''Neuromancer'',{{Sfn|Wood|1996|p=11}} including by one as its "principal source", as a literary predecessor of Gibson's "cyberspace".{{Sfn|Wood|1996|p=11}} Gibson's conception of cyberspace was compared by [[Samuel R. Delany]] to [[Roger Zelazny]]'s early short stories; Delany and other critics have explored the character of Molly as a development on the cyborg assassin of [[Joanna Russ]]'s ''[[The Female Man]]'' (1975).{{Sfn|Latham|2020|p=8}}{{Sfn|Murphy|2024|pp=10–11}}{{Efn|According to Latham, Delany comments that Gibson appeared "blind to any mention" of discussions on the matter.}} Visual media likewise impacted the style of ''Neuromancer''. Gibson has repeatedly mentioned the artwork of the 1970s French magazine [[Métal hurlant|''Métal Hurlant'']],{{Sfn|Gibson|De Haven|Jensen|1989}} with critics noting the proto-cyberpunk aesthetic of [[Jean Giraud|Jean "Moebius" Giraud]]'s "The Long Tomorrow" (1976), republished in the American ''[[Heavy Metal (magazine)|Heavy Metal]]'' magazine in 1977.{{Sfn|Higgins|Iung|2020|p=91}} [[John Carpenter]]'s ''[[Escape from New York]]'' (1981) influenced Gibson's approach to world-building, pointing to throwaway lines that suggested much about the film's world and its history beyond the narrative itself.{{Sfn|Smith|2014|p=42}} Upon seeing [[Ridley Scott]]'s ''[[Blade Runner]]'' (1982), Gibson worried readers would think he had copied the film's "fine visual texture".{{Sfn|Smith|2014|p=42}} Gibson wrote in his introduction to the graphic novel of ''Neuromancer'' that ''Blade Runner'' was not a conscious influence;{{Sfn|Gibson|De Haven|Jensen|1989}} in a later interview, he recounted a lunch with Scott where they both acknowledged a shared debt to Moebius's work in ''Métal Hurlant''.{{Sfn|Murphy|2024|p=16}}
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