About Time! The Abyss of the Future and End(s) of Subjectivity in (Climate) Dystopias

As the climate emergency becomes tangible, its intractability within current paradigms suggests the need to envision and enact new “worlds” and forms of subjectivity. This has proven difficult, also in popular culture. In literature and film, dystopia and catastrophe are a frequent resort to narrate...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Giovanni Bettini
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centro de Estudos Sociais da Universidade de Coimbra 2019-12-01
Series:e-cadernos ces
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/eces/4907
id doaj-450bed37479b46b7b6c4c274f0d32a2b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-450bed37479b46b7b6c4c274f0d32a2b2020-11-25T03:55:38ZengCentro de Estudos Sociais da Universidade de Coimbrae-cadernos ces1647-07372019-12-013210.4000/eces.4907About Time! The Abyss of the Future and End(s) of Subjectivity in (Climate) DystopiasGiovanni BettiniAs the climate emergency becomes tangible, its intractability within current paradigms suggests the need to envision and enact new “worlds” and forms of subjectivity. This has proven difficult, also in popular culture. In literature and film, dystopia and catastrophe are a frequent resort to narrate a post-climate crisis world. Building on scholarship critical of this tendency, the article zooms in on two dystopian novels, The Water Knife (Bacigalupi, 2015) and La galassia dei dementi (Cavazzoni, 2018), and contrasts the subjective positions these two “nightmares” project onto a future disaster – based on a melancholic mourning of loss, and on a shared condition of lack, respectively. The article argues that, while the former risks resuscitating established ways of “being human” – part of the crises that climate change symptomatizes –, the latter can facilitate imagining new and more just socio-ecological constellations.http://journals.openedition.org/eces/4907anthropoceneclimate/environmental fictiondystopiaenvironmental catastropheimagination
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Giovanni Bettini
spellingShingle Giovanni Bettini
About Time! The Abyss of the Future and End(s) of Subjectivity in (Climate) Dystopias
e-cadernos ces
anthropocene
climate/environmental fiction
dystopia
environmental catastrophe
imagination
author_facet Giovanni Bettini
author_sort Giovanni Bettini
title About Time! The Abyss of the Future and End(s) of Subjectivity in (Climate) Dystopias
title_short About Time! The Abyss of the Future and End(s) of Subjectivity in (Climate) Dystopias
title_full About Time! The Abyss of the Future and End(s) of Subjectivity in (Climate) Dystopias
title_fullStr About Time! The Abyss of the Future and End(s) of Subjectivity in (Climate) Dystopias
title_full_unstemmed About Time! The Abyss of the Future and End(s) of Subjectivity in (Climate) Dystopias
title_sort about time! the abyss of the future and end(s) of subjectivity in (climate) dystopias
publisher Centro de Estudos Sociais da Universidade de Coimbra
series e-cadernos ces
issn 1647-0737
publishDate 2019-12-01
description As the climate emergency becomes tangible, its intractability within current paradigms suggests the need to envision and enact new “worlds” and forms of subjectivity. This has proven difficult, also in popular culture. In literature and film, dystopia and catastrophe are a frequent resort to narrate a post-climate crisis world. Building on scholarship critical of this tendency, the article zooms in on two dystopian novels, The Water Knife (Bacigalupi, 2015) and La galassia dei dementi (Cavazzoni, 2018), and contrasts the subjective positions these two “nightmares” project onto a future disaster – based on a melancholic mourning of loss, and on a shared condition of lack, respectively. The article argues that, while the former risks resuscitating established ways of “being human” – part of the crises that climate change symptomatizes –, the latter can facilitate imagining new and more just socio-ecological constellations.
topic anthropocene
climate/environmental fiction
dystopia
environmental catastrophe
imagination
url http://journals.openedition.org/eces/4907
work_keys_str_mv AT giovannibettini abouttimetheabyssofthefutureandendsofsubjectivityinclimatedystopias
_version_ 1724469107754008576