About This Book
In a future society where emotions are monitored and criminal acts have largely disappeared, citizens wear emotiographs and trials evaluate whether emotional responses were justified. A narrator serves as the thirteenth juror in the case of John Hastings, accused of registering lethal hatred toward his wife, Mary. The court uses a concentric screen to project the defendant's memories as evidence, reconstructing domestic scenes and contested moments Hastings contends excuse his reaction. The narrative examines surveillance, public spectacle, and the moral complexity of judging inner states when memory, perception, and communal curiosity determine culpability.
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