Authors: Gerry Canavan
Derrida, Jacques,
219
DeVore, Irven,
x
disaster narratives.
See
eco-catastrophe narratives
Disch, Thomas,
40
,
68
,
84
. See also
Genocides, The
District 9
(Neill Blomkamp): apocalyptic futurity in,
18
; depiction of Nigerians in,
153
â
54
; documentary style in,
151
; plot overview,
151
â
53
; as South African SF,
143
; sympathetic prawns in,
151
â
52
,
154
â
55
,
157n20
Doyle, Arthur Conan,
83
Dudgeon, Robert Ellis,
116
dystopian fiction: Australia as dystopian site,
115
â
16
; climate change dystopian fiction,
127
â
29
,
131
,
135
,
139
; cognitive estrangement in,
181
; as contemporary realism,
254
â
55
; dystopian fundamentalism in
The Telling
,
71
; natural dystopia in Bacigalupi,
180
; techno-scientific dystopia in Atwood,
166
â
67
; utopia as implicit in,
xi
,
116
,
180
â
82
,
188
â
89
.
See also
apocalypse
;
climate change
;
eco-catastrophe narratives
;
nuclear weapons/nuclear war
;
scarcity
;
utopia
;
waste spaces
Earth Abides
(George R. Stewart): apocalyptic theme in,
49
; literary influences of,
50
â
51
; optimism-pessimism dialectic in,
17
; plot overview,
51
â
52
; publication of,
42
eco-catastrophe narratives: climate change narratives,
127
â
28
; disaster realism in Gee,
134
; eco-catastrophe causes in
Sea and Summer
,
122
â
25
; ecological SF theme,
243
; futuristic utopia as counterbalancing theme,
16
; 1960s anti-technological New Wave,
80
,
82
; 1960s eco-catastrophe narratives,
80
; nuclear catastrophe narratives,
4
,
116
; overpopulation themes in,
107
â
8
; science faction and,
200
â
202
; self-extinction in
The Genocides
,
85
â
86
; SF-reality dialectic and,
17
â
18
; in South African SF,
145
.
See also
apocalypse
;
climate change
;
dystopian fiction
;
nuclear weapons/nuclear war
;
scarcity
;
waste spaces
ecocide,
101
ecocritique: affinities with SF criticism,
41
â
42
; deflationary vs. inflationary modes in,
16
; of ecological imperialism,
82
â
83
,
86
â
91
; as science fiction,
17
ecofeminism.
See
feminism
ecological imperialism,
82
â
83
,
86
â
91
ecological literary criticism,
53
ecological science fiction: contemporary works,
41
; crisis as key theme in,
243
; Disch “On Saving the World” statement on,
84
; early works in,
x
,
42
; earthcare principle in,
128
â
30
; as ecological discourse,
251
â
53
; ecological writing and,
192
â
93
; environmentalist movement and,
56
â
57
,
89
â
90
; 1950s alien menace narratives,
78
â
79
; 1960s anti-technological New Wave,
80
,
82
; 1960s eco-catastrophe narratives,
80
; 1970s environmental crises and,
40
,
65
,
68
; SF-reality dialectic,
ix
â
x
,
16
â
17
,
53
,
83
,
101
,
116
; speaking for future generations in,
250
â
51
ecology: concept of place in,
148
; critique of economy in,
57
,
75n40
; deep ecology,
56
,
256
; early development of discipline,
25
,
30
â
32
; ecological pessimism,
200
â
202
; elimination of species in
Men Like Gods
,
32
â
37
; in extra-planetary themes,
41
; futuristic thinking in,
192
â
93
; germs as weapons in H. G. Wells,
26
,
34
; Heideggerian philosophy in,
206
â
7
; human survival as goal,
248
â
49
; insect social behavior study,
28
; invasive species and biotic transfer study,
82
â
83
,
86
â
88
,
91
; natural catastrophe in
Earth Abides
,
50
â
52
; 1970s environmental crises and,
65
,
68
; originary “oceanic feeling” of,
233
,
238
â
39
,
240n20
; political ecology,
56
â
60
,
67
,
72
,
199
â
202
,
257
â
59
; SF as ecological discourse,
251
â
53
; world correlators and,
217
â
18
.
See also
population ecology
ecomaternalism,
131
â
33
,
137
â
39
,
140n17
economy: anticapitalism in
Avatar
,
13
,
206
; apocalyptic capitalism,
3
,
12
â
14
,
85
â
86
; austerity economics,
18
; capitalist excess in
The Ice People
,
135
; capitalist “invisible hand” self-regulation,
108
â
9
; closed Spaceman economy,
6
â
9
,
105
; ecological view of,
57
,
61
â
73
,
75n40
; environmental sustainability and,
184
â
85
; financial
crisis in
Sea and Summer
,
121
â
24
; global slums in ecological thinking,
201
â
2
,
204n27
,
205n29
; limitless expansion as capitalist theme,
5
â
7
,
248
â
49
; non-capitalist habitats,
56
; post-apocalyptic stratification in
Oryx and Crake
,
166
â
69
; post-consumerism in
Daybreakers
,
13
â
14
; social welfare programs,
18
,
109
â
10
.
See also
Marx/Marxism
eco-thriller genre,
195
ecotopia: as Bacigalupi theme,
179
â
80
; Callenback formulation of,
3
; ecodystopian strategies for,
182
â
83
; ecological utopia style,
183
â
84
; in nonhuman Earths,
12
; nostalgic visualization in
WALL-E
,
15
; sustainability in
The Man Who Awoke
,
43
.
See also
utopia
Elton, Charles S.,
31
â
32
,
82
â
83
energy crisis: in 1970s SF,
40
; blood as energy in
Dabreakers' 2019
,
13
â
14
; calorie wars in Bacigalupi,
181
â
82
; climate change tandem apocalypse,
5
; Enlightenment philosophy and,
203
; in Lawrence Manning,
40
; as Le Guin world reduction,
65
; tar sands oil extraction,
192
environmental science fiction.
See
ecological science fiction
ethnicity (indigeneous Other in
Avatar
),
13
,
19
ethology,
30
Evernden, Beil,
148
evolution: aesthetic species in
Avatar
and,
223
; disease resistance in
Men Like Gods
,
34
; disease resistance in
The Ice People
,
135
; elimination of species in
Men Like Gods
,
32
â
35
; ethics as component of,
43
; lifeboat ethics and,
109
â
10
; natural balance in
City
,
45
,
48
; natural catastrophe in
Earth Abides
,
50
â
52
; as paradigmatic mode of SF,
42
; planetary awareness and,
207
â
8
; population ecology and,
101
â
3
,
108
; as
War of the Worlds
theme,
26
,
30
feminism: Disch on feminist SF,
68
; ecofeminist consciousness in
Word for World is Forest
,
88
; ecofeminist movement,
xi
,
141n18
; ecomaternalism and,
131
â
33
,
137
â
39
,
140n17
; Gee as feminist writer,
134
; in
The Ice People
,
18
; in Le Guin,
68
; 1960s anti-technological New Wave and,
80
; women's activism in
The Ice People
,
137
â
39
fictionalization of science,
x
Fleischer, Richard,
107
. See also
Soylent Green
fossil fuel crisis.
See
energy crisis
Fraenkel, Abraham,
217
Frankfurt School,
199
Freedman, Carl,
16
Freud, Sigmund,
233
Fuller, Richard Buckminster,
105
futuristic themes: advanced development in
Men Like Gods
,
32
; ecology as necessity in,
41
; limitless capitalist expansion and,
5
â
7
; Turner frontier thesis and,
6
â
7
.
See also
dystopian fiction
;
time and temporality
;
utopia
Gabriel, Peter,
15
Gadamer, Hans-Georg,
201
gender: beauty culture in
Souvenir
,
149
; earthcare principle and,
128
â
29
,
137
â
39
; ecomaternalism,
131
â
33
,
137
â
39
,
140n17
; fragmentary feminine experience in
Souvenir
,
146
; gendered nonhuman agency,
142n27
; gendered utopia in Le Guin,
63
; gender segregation in
The Ice People
,
135
â
39
; sexual reproduction in Bacigalupi's “Pop Squad,”
186
â
89
;
Spaceship Earth and,
99
,
105
; surface/depth ocean study and,
227
.
See also
feminism
genetic science: clones,
146
â
48
; genetic modification in
Greener Than You Think
,
49
â
50
; genetic testing,
ix
â
x
Genocides, The
(Thomas Disch): Ballard eco-catastrophe theme in,
81
; critique of ecological imperialism,
82
,
85
â
87
,
91
; exterminative/genocidal fantasy in,
17
,
49
; New Wave ecological issues in,
84
; plot overview,
84
â
87
; reviews/critiques of,
81
â
82
Gernsback, Hugo,
2
. See also
Amazing Stories
;
Wonder Stories
Gibson, William,
x
Girlfriend in a Coma
(Douglas Coupland),
18
,
161
â
66
,
171
,
173
â
74
Glicksohn, Susan,
87