Ophelia Rising (original) (raw)

Climate Heroism - Introduction

helden.heroes.héros. special issue 8, 2022

n science, and largely in politics and society, it is now accepted that current climate changes are human-made despite their superhuman de- structiveness. The Anthropocene, the idea that humanity has become a dominant geological force, has turned into a useful shorthand term for all the new contexts and demands of environmental issues that are truly planetary in scale. However, climate change itself remains an abstract phenomenon which can only be experienced indirectly, i.e. in its dramatic consequences, for instance in natural disasters. The discrepancy between increasingly urgent appeals from climate scientists for a Green Turn- around and the extreme slowness with which political and social changes are made, illustrates both a communication problem of science and a perception problem of those who need to make changes. In an effort to make climate change tangible to society and, ideally, to motivate people to take action and thus prevent complete climate catastrophe, the topic has been expand- ed into narratives and visuals which feature both human and non-human heroic figures.

Beyond Inevitability: Telling Another Story About Climate

Character and ... / Vol. 10, 2024

Seeking to embody good character by making good choices about climate can be particularly challenging when people face contradictory or even misleading information, and this situation can lead many into either apathy or despair. By drawing on examples from climate scientists and the storytelling power of literature, I argue that telling a story beyond that of inevitable failure or doom is necessary for us to take collective action. I also contend that cultivating the imagination to see beyond simple stories of inevitability is necessary for our larger communities to discover new avenues for meaningful change.

Climate Fiction

The Cambridge Companion to Twenty-First Century American Fiction, 2021

Heather Houser considers the conceptual frameworks of a topic that bears on nearly every other chapter in this Companion, contemporary “cli-fi” and ecocritical approaches to current literature. When writers presume transformational climate change as a starting point, rather than an abstract possibility, they narrate an “uncanny valley of familiarity and radical alteration” that extends, accelerates, or alters the logics of the present into near or distant futures of drought, warfare, destitution, and superstorms.