Abstract
Chapter 7 directs critical attention to contemporary narratives that are coalescing in popular technology discourses that imagine climate crisis as an occasion to expand on structures of capitalism. This narrative template – whose leitmotif is making rather than saving nature – turns away from what Ramachandra Guha termed “varieties of environmentalism” in celebrating technological acts of inventing, designing, and rebuilding biophysical worlds. It begins by addressing the parallel emergence of a high-tech planet and a planet in peril as divergent stories of global capitalism. It then examines two visions of remaking the planet: geoengineering and terraforming. These overlapping engineering arenas draw an expressly environmental portrait of innovation that imbues the tech industry with quasi-magical capacities that can be leveraged either to improve on or to transcend the Anthropocene. Offering a counterpoint to this techno-utopia, the chapter concludes with an analysis of Karen Tei Yamashita’s novel Through the Arc of the Rainforest (1990), which satirizes the colonial logic of world-building fantasies while making the planet a charismatic character with a story of its own.
| Original language | English (US) |
|---|---|
| Title of host publication | The Cambridge Companion to Environmental Humanities |
| Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
| Pages | 86-99 |
| Number of pages | 14 |
| ISBN (Electronic) | 9781009039369 |
| ISBN (Print) | 9781316510681 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Jan 1 2021 |
All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes
- General Arts and Humanities
- General Environmental Science
Keywords
- Anthropocene
- Climate fiction
- Environmental narrative
- Geoengineering
- Karen tei yamashita
- Speculative narrative
- Techno-determinism
- Techno-utopianism
- Terraforming
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