Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1629Hits:19383654Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID184136
Title ProperClimate Fiction, Climate Theory
Other Title InformationDecolonising Imaginations of Global Futures
LanguageENG
AuthorDeath, Carl
Summary / Abstract (Note)The international politics of climate change invokes the imagination of various potential global futures, ranging from techno-optimist visions of ecological modernisation to apocalyptic nightmares of climate chaos. This article argues that most dominant framings of the future in climate policy imaginaries tend to be depoliticised and linear visions of universal, homogenous time, with little spatio-temporal or ecological plurality. This article aims to convince IR scholars of climate politics that Africanfuturist climate fiction novels can contribute to the decolonisation of climate politics through radically different socio-climatic imaginaries to those that dominate mainstream imaginations of climate futures. The Africanfuturist climate fiction novels of authors such as Nnedi Okorafor, Lauren Beukes and Doris Lessing imagine different spaces, temporalities, ecologies and politics. Reading them as climate theory, they offer the possibility of a more decolonised climate politics, in which issues of land and climate justice, loss and damage, extractive political economies and the racialised and gendered violence of capitalism are central.
`In' analytical NoteMillennium: Journal of International Studies Vol. 50, No.2; Jan 2022: p.430-455
Journal SourceMillennium: Journal of International Studies 2022-04 50, 2
Key WordsClimate Change ;  Postcolonial Theory ;  Science Fiction