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These Overheating Worlds

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  • Kendra Strauss

Abstract

In 2003 the British literary magazine Granta published an issue on climate change, “This Overheating World,” containing reportage and essays but almost no fiction—and the claim that our “failure of the imagination” regarding socioenvironmental change is both a political and a literary one. The decade since has seen a relative burgeoning of what has been dubbed “cli-fi,” dominated by apocalyptic and dystopian literary–geographical imaginations. In this article I ask this question: If these are our ways of imagining the future, what are the relationships among cultural imaginaries, theories, and politics of socioenvironmental change? Engaging the work of Frederic Jameson on utopia, and the novels of Margaret Atwood and Barbara Kingsolver, I argue that the flourishing interest in narrative, stories, and storytelling in human geography opens up opportunities for exploring political imaginaries of climate change through utopian and dystopian impulses present in its “fictionable worlds.”

Suggested Citation

  • Kendra Strauss, 2015. "These Overheating Worlds," Annals of the American Association of Geographers, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 105(2), pages 342-350, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:raagxx:v:105:y:2015:i:2:p:342-350
    DOI: 10.1080/00045608.2014.973805
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    Cited by:

    1. Christopher Benjamin Menadue & Karen Diane Cheer, 2017. "Human Culture and Science Fiction: A Review of the Literature, 1980-2016," SAGE Open, , vol. 7(3), pages 21582440177, August.

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