Allegory and Articulation in Geographies of Climate Fiction

IF 1 Q3 GEOGRAPHY Geohumanities Pub Date : 2022-07-03 DOI:10.1080/2373566X.2022.2113337
K. Schlosser
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Abstract

The contemporary genre of climate fiction can be thought of as the stories we tell ourselves about our changing global climate. Thus, it is important to understand the dynamics behind the production and circulation of those stories. This article first reviews how geographers have begun to analyze these questions with regard to climate fiction. Some analyses reflect a certain “ideology critique,” similar to Fredric Jameson’s theories of allegory, while others foreground the agency of fiction in prefiguring political futures. This article also shows how recent suggestions that Gillian Hart’s theorization of articulation bridges the classic disciplinary divide between historical materialist and poststructuralist accounts, in addition to work in the subfield of literary geography, are relevant in this case. After discussing examples of “ideology critique” and what I term the “fiction-as-change-agent” critique, I examine how theorizing articulation can help show the dialectical relationship between ideology and fictive agency in the context of contemporary climate fiction. I do this in reference to two recent works of climate fiction: Amitav Ghosh’s Gun Island (2019) and Lydia Millet’s A Children’s Bible (2020).
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气候小说地理学中的寓言与表达
当代气候小说可以被认为是我们告诉自己的关于全球气候变化的故事。因此,理解这些故事的制作和传播背后的动态是很重要的。本文首先回顾了地理学家如何开始分析这些关于气候虚构的问题。一些分析反映了某种“意识形态批判”,类似于弗雷德里克·詹姆逊(frederic Jameson)的寓言理论,而另一些分析则强调了小说在预测政治未来方面的作用。本文还展示了吉莉安·哈特(Gillian Hart)最近提出的关于衔接的理论,除了在文学地理学的子领域工作之外,还弥合了历史唯物主义和后结构主义描述之间的经典学科鸿沟的建议,这些建议与本案例有关。在讨论了“意识形态批判”和我所说的“小说作为变革媒介”批判的例子之后,我研究了在当代气候小说的背景下,理论化的表达如何有助于展示意识形态和虚构代理之间的辩证关系。我参考了最近两部气候小说:阿米塔夫·高什的《Gun Island》(2019)和莉迪亚·米勒的《儿童圣经》(2020)。
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来源期刊
Geohumanities
Geohumanities GEOGRAPHY-
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
14.30%
发文量
22
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