Josephine Ren, L. Norris, M. Ćirković, Donna T. Tong, Julia Gatermann, Anna McFarlane, D. Higgins, P. Kincaid, P. Alexander, Lorenzo Andolfatto, Kumiko Saito, Roger Luckhurst, Michael Fuchs
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
ABSTRACT:As global social and environmental conditions deteriorate, growing ranks of scientists, environmentalists, and writers have pointed toward population growth and resource scarcity as primary conditions of ecological catastrophe. Studying the “Future War” subgenre of Late Victorian science fiction, I search for the origins of this contemporary concern with so-called “overpopulation” and resource scarcity. By examining George Chesney’s The Battle of Dorking (1871) and H.G. Wells’s The War of the Worlds (1889), this paper explores how late Victorian anxieties about the relative decline of the British Empire, constellated around scarcity, continue to frame contemporary understandings of social and environmental crisis today.
摘要:随着全球社会和环境状况的恶化,越来越多的科学家、环保主义者和作家指出,人口增长和资源稀缺是生态灾难的主要条件。通过研究维多利亚晚期科幻小说的“未来战争”亚类,我寻找这种当代关注所谓“人口过剩”和资源稀缺的根源。通过考察乔治·切斯尼(George Chesney)的《多尔金之战》(The Battle of Dorking,1871)和H.G.威尔斯(H.G.Wells)的《世界大战》(The War of The Worlds,1889),本文探讨了维多利亚时代晚期对大英帝国相对衰落的焦虑是如何继续构成当代对当今社会和环境危机的理解的。