“去他妈的地球”:揭露火星殖民营销,从行星感知过时到启示录的“新地球”修辞

S. Taylor
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本文认为,在推动火星殖民的过程中,SpaceX创始人埃隆·马斯克(Elon Musk)的营销策略有效地利用了美国文化中根深蒂固的基督教影响、超凡脱俗、启示性的千禧年隐喻,这些隐喻具有强大的文化共鸣。SpaceX的信息是对基督教、殖民主义、拓荒者和帝国主义等交织在一起的主题的二级挪用,这些主题充斥着天体殖民科幻小说的作品。马斯克和他的许多追随者都是这些作品的忠实粉丝,并从它们特有的浪漫化、乌托邦式、太空扩张主义的叙事中汲取灵感,为火星殖民计划提供动力。在运用流行的营销技巧时,比如“制造紧迫感”、“感知过时”、“稀缺营销”、“爆炸性报价”和“争论淡化”,马斯克预言性地强调了地球出走的存在紧迫性。当火星被重新命名为“地球2.0”时,“火星就是新地球”的视觉和语言修辞的战略使用引发了令人不安的动态,有效地将吸走地球上剩余的脆弱资源合法化,以满足技术官僚亿万富翁精英的殖民和企业利益。本文剖析了火星殖民营销中引发的超凡脱俗的逃离和天定命运的宗教文化天意共鸣,同时敦促公众媒体干预该营销的严重误导信息。
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“F*ck Earth”: Unmasking Mars Colonization Marketing, from Planetary Perceived Obsolescence to Apocalyptic “New Earth” Rhetoric
This article argues that, in promoting Mars colonization, SpaceX founder Elon Musk’s marketing strategies effectively tap into powerful and culturally resonant Christian-inflected, otherworldly, apocalyptic millennial tropes embedded in American culture. SpaceX’s messaging engages in a second-order appropriation of entwined Christian, colonial, frontierist, and imperialist themes that saturate works of astrocolonial science fiction. Musk and many of his followers are devoted fans of these works and draw inspiration from their endemic romanticized, utopian, space expansionist narratives in order to fuel the project of Mars colonization. In deploying popular marketing techniques, such as “manufactured urgency,” “perceived obsolescence,” “scarcity marketing,” “exploding offers,” and “argument dilution,” Musk prophetically stresses the existential urgency of planetary exodus. As Mars gets rebranded as “Earth 2.0,” the strategic use of apocalyptic “Mars as New Earth” visual and verbal rhetoric activates troubling dynamics that effectively legitimize siphoning off Earth’s remaining fragile resources in order to feed the colonial and corporate interests of a technocratic billionaire elite. This article dissects the religio-cultural providential resonances of otherworldly escape and manifest destiny evoked in Mars colonization marketing, while urging public media interventions into that marketing’s grossly misleading messaging.
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