http://liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/products/74456

Terraforming: Ecopolitical Transformations and Environmentalism in Science
Fiction

Chris Pak

£80.00
ISBN: 9781781382844
Publication: June 1, 2016
Series: Liverpool Science Fiction Texts and Studies 55

Tags: Chris Pak, English Literature, Hardback,Series: Liverpool Science
Fiction Texts and Studies

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This book explores the emergence and development of terraforming in science
fiction from H.G. Wells’s The War of the Worlds (1898) to James Cameron’s
blockbuster Avatar (2009). Terraforming is the process of making other
worlds habitable for human life. Its counterpart on Earth – geoengineering
– has begun to receive serious consideration as a way to address the
effects of climate change. This book asks how science fiction has imagined
the ways we shape both our world and other planets and how stories of
terraforming reflect on science, society and environmentalism. It traces
the growth of the motif of terraforming in stories by such writers as H.G.
Wells and Olaf Stapledon in the UK, American pulp science fiction by Ray
Bradbury, Robert Heinlein and Arthur C. Clarke, the counter cultural novels
of Frank Herbert, Ursula K. Le Guin and Ernest Callenbach, and Pamela
Sargent’s Venus trilogy, Frederick Turner’s epic poem of terraforming,
Genesis, and Kim Stanley Robinson’s acclaimed Mars trilogy. It explores
terraforming as a nexus for environmental philosophy, the pastoral,
ecology, the Gaia hypothesis, the politics of colonisation and habitation,
tradition and memory. This book shows how contemporary environmental
awareness and our understanding of climate change is influenced by science
fiction, and how terraforming in particular has offered scientists,
philosophers, and many other readers a motif to aid in thinking in complex
ways about the human impact on planetary environments. Amidst contemporary
anxieties about climate change, terraforming offers an important vantage
from which to consider the ways humankind shapes and is shaped by their
world.

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