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...
Main Author: | |
---|---|
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 |