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Sustainable Stories: Managing Climate Change with Literature

Author

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  • Gesa Mackenthun

    (North American Studies, Department of English and American Studies, University of Rostock, D-18055 Rostock, Germany)

Abstract

Literary and cultural texts are essential in shaping emotional and intellectual dispositions toward the human potential for a sustainable transformation of society. Due to its appeal to the human imagination and human empathy, literature can enable readers for sophisticated understandings of social and ecological justice. An overabundance of catastrophic near future scenarios largely prevents imagining the necessary transition toward a socially responsible and ecologically mindful future as a non-violent and non-disastrous process. The paper argues that transition stories that narrate the rebuilding of the world in the midst of crisis are much better instruments in bringing about a human “mindshift” (Göpel) than disaster stories. Transition stories, among them the Parable novels by Octavia Butler and Kim Stanley Robinson’s The Ministry for the Future (2020), offer feasible ideas about how to orchestrate economic and social change. The analysis of recent American, Canadian, British, and German near future novels—both adult and young adult fictions—sheds light on those aspects best suited for effecting behavioral change in recipients’ minds: exemplary ecologically sustainable characters and actions, companion quests, cooperative communities, sources of epistemological innovation and spiritual resilience, and an ethics and aesthetics of repair.

Suggested Citation

  • Gesa Mackenthun, 2021. "Sustainable Stories: Managing Climate Change with Literature," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 13(7), pages 1-22, April.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:13:y:2021:i:7:p:4049-:d:530706
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