The sheep look forward: Counterfactuals, dystopias, and ecological science fiction as a social science enterprise

John Brunner’s 1972 novel, 'The Sheep Look Up', is the story of the year leading up to a global ecological and political catastrophe. Set primarily in the United States in an unspecified near future, 'The Sheep Look Up' tells the story of “death by a thousand cuts”: problem upon...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kate O'Neill
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BioOne 2018-06-01
Series:Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.elementascience.org/articles/303
id doaj-28aa7b26c1db431c95fb7035225c5b57
record_format Article
spelling doaj-28aa7b26c1db431c95fb7035225c5b572020-11-24T22:01:41ZengBioOneElementa: Science of the Anthropocene2325-10262018-06-016110.1525/elementa.303269The sheep look forward: Counterfactuals, dystopias, and ecological science fiction as a social science enterpriseKate O'Neill0Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, CaliforniaJohn Brunner’s 1972 novel, 'The Sheep Look Up', is the story of the year leading up to a global ecological and political catastrophe. Set primarily in the United States in an unspecified near future, 'The Sheep Look Up' tells the story of “death by a thousand cuts”: problem upon problem, malfeasance upon malfeasance, which accumulate, reinforce each other and are met only by a failing political and economic system that ultimately collapses under its own weight. This article reflects on themes and topics of the novel that resonate for social science theorists and teachers in the environmental social sciences, including global environmental politics. First, it provides a type of counterfactual analysis. It opens a window into how the world might have been had certain actions not been taken. Second, it provides a warning: how the world might be if we do not act. Third, it provides a model of how a disastrous transition might unfold as social resilience has been worn down. Looking back on the almost fifty years since the novel was written demonstrates how its scenario was averted through concerted government and societal actions, but the article also points out how Brunner’s work has strong resonance with our present – and at different times in the recent past.https://www.elementascience.org/articles/303Science Fictiondystopiaeco-catastrophenecro-capitalismscenarioscounterfactuals
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kate O'Neill
spellingShingle Kate O'Neill
The sheep look forward: Counterfactuals, dystopias, and ecological science fiction as a social science enterprise
Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene
Science Fiction
dystopia
eco-catastrophe
necro-capitalism
scenarios
counterfactuals
author_facet Kate O'Neill
author_sort Kate O'Neill
title The sheep look forward: Counterfactuals, dystopias, and ecological science fiction as a social science enterprise
title_short The sheep look forward: Counterfactuals, dystopias, and ecological science fiction as a social science enterprise
title_full The sheep look forward: Counterfactuals, dystopias, and ecological science fiction as a social science enterprise
title_fullStr The sheep look forward: Counterfactuals, dystopias, and ecological science fiction as a social science enterprise
title_full_unstemmed The sheep look forward: Counterfactuals, dystopias, and ecological science fiction as a social science enterprise
title_sort sheep look forward: counterfactuals, dystopias, and ecological science fiction as a social science enterprise
publisher BioOne
series Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene
issn 2325-1026
publishDate 2018-06-01
description John Brunner’s 1972 novel, 'The Sheep Look Up', is the story of the year leading up to a global ecological and political catastrophe. Set primarily in the United States in an unspecified near future, 'The Sheep Look Up' tells the story of “death by a thousand cuts”: problem upon problem, malfeasance upon malfeasance, which accumulate, reinforce each other and are met only by a failing political and economic system that ultimately collapses under its own weight. This article reflects on themes and topics of the novel that resonate for social science theorists and teachers in the environmental social sciences, including global environmental politics. First, it provides a type of counterfactual analysis. It opens a window into how the world might have been had certain actions not been taken. Second, it provides a warning: how the world might be if we do not act. Third, it provides a model of how a disastrous transition might unfold as social resilience has been worn down. Looking back on the almost fifty years since the novel was written demonstrates how its scenario was averted through concerted government and societal actions, but the article also points out how Brunner’s work has strong resonance with our present – and at different times in the recent past.
topic Science Fiction
dystopia
eco-catastrophe
necro-capitalism
scenarios
counterfactuals
url https://www.elementascience.org/articles/303
work_keys_str_mv AT kateoneill thesheeplookforwardcounterfactualsdystopiasandecologicalsciencefictionasasocialscienceenterprise
AT kateoneill sheeplookforwardcounterfactualsdystopiasandecologicalsciencefictionasasocialscienceenterprise
_version_ 1725838995826409472