http://www.strangehorizons.com/2016/20160926/pak-a.shtml

Terraforming and Geoengineering in Science Fiction
By Chris Pak

26 September 2016

Over the last decade, terraforming and geoengineering have become
increasingly visible in the multiple discourses of popular culture, in news
media, in policy discussions on climate change, and in discussions of
resource extraction and energy systems. There has been a significant
year-on-year increase since 2006, from approximately 40 articles to 150 in
2008, up to 540 in 2013, as collected by the LexisNexis database. [1] In
the IPCC’s 2014 report, "Mitigation of Climate Change,"
geoengineering—specifically carbon management and sequestration and solar
radiation management—is explored as a possible emergency solution to
catastrophic climate change. [2] George Monbiot suggests in Feral:
Rewilding the Land, the Sea, and Human Life that stepping back and allowing
whale populations to recover might result in a trophic cascade with
consequences that "could be seen as a benign form of
geo-engineering." [3] Naomi Klein opens This Changes Everything with an
epigraph taken from an article by Kim Stanley Robinson [4] and claims later
in her book that "science fiction is rife with fantasies of
terraforming—humans traveling to lifeless planets and engineering them into
earthlike habitats. The Canadian tar sands are the opposite:
terra-deforming." [5]

Terraforming and geoengineering have also appeared with increasing
frequency in film: James Cameron’s Avatar (2009) [6] explores resource
extraction on the alien moon Pandora—an instance of terraforming that
Patrick D. Murphy describes as "terragouging," whereby "whatever necessary
would be done to facilitate extraction of raw materials for earthly
consumption." [7] In Zack Snyder’s Man of Steel (2013), Earth is threatened
with an inverted instance of terraforming in which aliens from Superman’s
homeworld attempt to transform Earth to suit their desires, at the expense
of all life on the planet. [8] Ridley Scott’s The Martian (2015) is a
classic SF story of ingenuity and resilience in which the astronaut Mark
Watney, marooned on Mars, creates a closed self-sustaining system for a
brief while in his attempt to survive until a rescue mission can be
mobilised to return him to Earth. [9]

These contemporary narratives draw from a rich body of SF dealing with
terraforming and geoengineering. Indeed, “terraforming” was coined by SF
writer Jack Williamson in his 1942 short story, “Collision Orbit,” [10] and
its meaning has since solidified to refer to the transformation of
planetary landscapes to render them habitable for humans. Michael Dumiak,
writing for the popular science magazine Cosmos, explains that
"[t]erraforming Mars is basically a radical application of human-induced
climate change." [11] Climate change—the transformation of Earth’s
planetary landscape—is an instance of geoengineering, or terraforming on
Earth. Martyn J. Fogg argues that it is preferable to distinguish between
geoengineering, terraforming, and the manipulation of solar systems, or
astrophysical engineering. [12] Another concept that chimes with Monbiot’s
notion that the impact of ecological systems on global environments can be
considered a form of geoengineering is Robert H. Haynes’ notion of
“ecopoiesis,” "[t]he creation of a self-sustaining ecosystem, or biosphere,
on a lifeless planet […] a new word which means 'the making of an abode for
life.'" [13]

Stories of terraforming and geoengineering are especially resonant in the
contemporary context of climate change as narratives that have the capacity
to engage with key themes, issues, and concerns regarding the
transformation of the global environment. Terraforming and geoengineering
narratives are stories of the “Anthropocene,” a term coined by Paul J.
Crutzen and Eugene F. Stoermer to refer to a geologic period—which they
date to the industrial revolution—whereby the global effects of humankind’s
transformation of the environment become noticeable. [14] The terraforming
tradition records the development of environmental concerns throughout the
twentieth and twenty-first centuries, offering a body of thought about
ecological themes that can be brought to bear against thought about climate
change. Over the course of the terraforming tradition, the form has been
used to scrutinise, comment, and reflect on the transformation of planets
and how this might necessitate new forms of relating to the shifting
concept of nature. It also invites reflection upon new forms of being human
and new societal permutations in a parallel effort to think about the idea
of nature, how humankind relates to nature, and how we might live in the
world and make of it a home.

SF narratives of terraforming and geoengineering offer a resource for
thinking about drastic re-organisations to society. The tradition is far
less enthusiastic about the potential for terraforming and geoengineering
to avert or mitigate destruction on Earth and far less sanguine about the
ability of organisations and governments to manage such large-scale
endeavours in ways that would expand freedom and move towards an equitable
distribution of resources, even if the tradition does not dismiss the
possibility that some terraforming and geoengineering approaches might
offer ideal technological fixes to climate change. What makes these
narratives important is that they contextualise the implications of
terraforming and geoengineering by situating these endeavours in the
context of environmental, evolutionary, and cultural history, and they
afford reflection and discussion about a host of issues relating to climate
change.

Scientific Romances and Early Pulp SF

Although the first stories that deal with terraforming or geoengineering
appear in the early twentieth century, stories of weather control have
explored cognate territory. James Rodger Fleming, in Fixing the Sky: The
Checkered History of Weather and Climate Control, explores the history of
cloud seeding and fog generation and explicitly connects these efforts to
contemporary research and experiments in geoengineering as a form of
climate change intervention, reversal, or mitigation. For Fleming, the
history of weather and climate control serves as a warning against blithely
trusting in geoengineering as an appropriate technological fix for climate
change. Instead, the lessons that cloud seeding teaches us are that a
"trinity of understanding, prediction, and control undergirds the dominant
fantasies of both science and science fiction," and that the story of such
scientific endeavour outlines "a tragicomedy of overreaching, hubris, and
self-delusion." [15] Fleming opens his history by exploring stories of
weather and climate control, including SF dealing with terraforming and
geoengineering by Jules Verne, Jack Williamson, Hal Clement, Arthur C.
Clarke, Kurt Vonnegut, Michael Crichton, and Kim Stanley Robinson. Although
this article does not expand on weather control per se, it is important to
note that stories of terraforming and geoengineering are informed by the
widespread and longstanding interest in the theme in the scientific
romances and pulp SF of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

The earliest stories of geoengineering and terraforming include H. G.
Wells’s The War of the Worlds (1898), which features an early instance of
inverted ecopoiesis, whereby the invading Martians aggressively transform
Earth’s ecology into one resembling that of Mars—a case of
areoforming. [16] That Wells drew a comparison between the invading
Martians and the genocide of the Tasmanians in the early nineteenth
century, along with the extinction of species such as the dodo and bison,
makes explicit the critique of cultural and environmental destruction that
Wells was engaging. Alfred W. Crosby, in Ecological Imperialism: The
Biological Expansion of Europe, 900-1900, describes his concept of
"portmanteau biota," a collection of organisms—plants, animals, and
bacteria—that makes possible the colonisation of other lands. [17] Crosby
investigates the case of New Zealand and the imports that British settlers
brought to the island, which instigated a demographic shift in the
colonists’ favour, thus enabling a measure of control over indigenous
peoples and ecologies.

Han Ryner’s “A Biography of Victor Venturon” was first published in French
in 1909. This story ironically describes how, in the "year 14,500 of the
Social Era," Earth had entered a new Ice Age. The renowned Victor Venturon
details the causes of this climate change in his book, The New Prometheus,
and proposes to move Earth nearer to the sun by flattening the planet
through a global project involving "[i]mmense earthworks." His proposals
are rejected and he is mocked, but the Earth is struck by a comet which
produces the desired effect, albeit at the cost of the lives of half the
human population and the destruction of many cities. The collision,
however, comes late and the Earth is brought too close to the Sun. Venturon
is given the task of arresting the Earth’s approach, which he does with
"great heliofluidic cannons." [18] His achievement in the wake of the doubt
that was cast upon him is taken as a lesson:

It teaches us the three anthropological virtues, which are: first, faith in
the practical results of science; secondly, hope for the immortality of
life in general, and the admirable resistance of our species in particular;
and thirdly, love for humanity. [19]

These anthropological virtues speak to the priorities of the Baconian
scheme: "[t]he end of our foundation is the knowledge of causes, and secret
motions of things; and the enlarging of the bounds of human empire, to the
effecting of all things possible." [20] Venturon’s biographer calls for a
faith in science that Fleming sees as dangerous because of the risk
involved in the global-scale adaptation of Earth, itself exacerbated by the
lack of understanding of the planet’s processes and the long history of
failure when it comes to weather and climate modification.

Olaf Stapledon’s Last and First Men [21]drew from J. B. S. Haldane’s
speculation about the terraformation of Venus in his 1927 essay, “The Last
Judgement,” [22] and inspired Wells’s future history The Shape of Things to
Come (1933). [23] Stapledon’s ironic reworking of Haldane’s speculation
sees the colonising species of human engaging in the genocide of the
indigenous Venusians. Both Wells and Stapledon greatly influenced the
development of SF motifs that were taken up in the post-World War II era
and beyond. Other scientific romances and early pulp SF dealing with
terraforming and geoengineering themes include Octave Béliard’s “La Journée
d'un Parisien au XXIe Siècle” (1910), [24] Stapledon’s Star
Maker (1937), [25] Edsel Newton’s “The Flaming Cloud” (1931) and “The Hour
the Conqueror Came” (1931), [26] I. R. Nathanson’s “The Antarctic
Transformation” (1931), [27] Laurence Manning’s The Man Who Awoke (1933)
and “The Living Galaxy” (1934), [28] and John Russell Fearn’s “Earth’s
Mausoleum” (1935). [29]

Terraforming in 1950s SF

Although Williamson coined “terraforming” and wrote stories that touched
upon the theme throughout the 1940s, collected in Seetee Shock (1949)
and Seetee Ship(1950), [30] the term already had a capacious sense by the
time it was reworked within the sf pulps. Henry Kuttner and C. L.
Moore’s Fury (1950) dealt with a civilisation that had retreated to the
relative safety of their undersea cities after Venus’s dangerous life-forms
had repelled them from the surface. [31] The ruthless Sam Reed reignites
the colonists’ desire to conquer Venus’s landmass and embarks on a project
to transform the planet according to his vision. Jack Vance’s wry short
story, “I’ll Build Your Dream Castle” (1947), deals with the terraformation
of asteroids that have been brought into Earth’s orbit and explores themes
of corporate social responsibility and justice. [32]Some of the stories
that make up Ray Bradbury’s The Martian Chronicles (1950) deal with the
failed colonisation and terraforming of Mars, offering cautionary tales
about the hubris that is imagined as humankind’s inheritance projected into
space. [33]

Robert A. Heinlein’s Farmer in the Sky (1950) is the first novel to feature
terraforming as its central theme. [34] Heinlein’s novel projects
homesteading and the colonisation of America onto space while
simultaneously warning against drawing neat parallels between the
colonisation of the two locales. Unlike Kuttner and Moore and Bradbury’s
treatment of Venus and Mars as phantasmagoric spaces, Heinlein portrays
Ganymede and its colonisation in terms that invoke population bionomics,
ecological relationships, and the material limits of living and
transforming another planet. Heinlein establishes a tradition of
terraforming narratives to which other writers would contribute—Gregory
Benford, for example, pays homage to Farmer in the Sky with his own
novel, Jupiter Project (1972), [35] and Heinlein himself would later expand
on the same themes in The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress (1966). [36]

Other works of the 1950s continue this tradition: Arthur C. Clarke’s The
Sands of Mars (1951), [37] Isaac Asimov’s “The Martian Way”
(1952), [38] Walter M. Miller’s “Cruxifixus Etiam” (1953), [39] and Poul
Anderson’s “The Big Rain” (1954), The Snows of Ganymede (1955), and “To
Build a World” (1964) [40] are all concerned with exploring the problems
involved in developing a new culture that is cognisant of the realities of
living in a radically different environment with stringent material limits.
The societies that develop on other planets negotiate between utopian and
dystopian orientations—Anderson’s portrayal of repressive societies in his
stories draws from the Cold War paranoia that became increasingly prevalent
in pulp SF throughout the 1950s. Critiques of imperialism in the tradition
of Stapledon’s Last and First Men are also present, with Anderson alluding
to the genocide of cetacean-like Venusians in his short story “Sister
Planet” (1959), [41] while Clarke would present in “Before Eden” (1961) an
instance of the careless genocide of Venusian life-forms via an
unintentional act of ecopoiesis: the toxins, bacteria, and viruses present
in the thoughtlessly discarded litter left by the first expedition
eradicate the aliens that they had just discovered. [42]

Terraforming in Countercultural 1960s SF

Perhaps the most well-known of terraforming narratives, Frank
Herbert’s Dune (1965) ushers in a new tradition that departs from the
conventions established by the SF pulps and novels of the 1950s. [43] Its
influence on contemporary real-world thought about geoengineering is
highlighted by the SPICE Project’s (2010–2014) allusion to the novel: this
collaborative project, funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences
Research Council (EPSRC), the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC),
and the Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC), investigated the
feasibility of solar radiation management via the injection of
radiation-reflective particles into the stratosphere. [44] Ecology is
central to Herbert’s novel, functioning as an organising principle for the
novel’s themes and plot that helps to structure its representation of
cultures, economics, and politics. In Dune, the conflict between the dream
of bringing physical and spiritual vitality and material
abundance—symbolised by the spreading growth of plant life on the desert
planet—is balanced by the destruction of an older form of spiritual
cohesion and reciprocity with the planet—symbolised by the threatened
disappearance of the deep desert, the sandworms, and the superlatively
valued spice melange, and the rise to power of the city that becomes the
centre of the interplanetary empire in Dune’s sequels, Dune Messiah (1969)
and Children of Dune (1976). [45] Dune brings together themes of social
engineering, migration, and the terragouging of planets and makes explicit
the relationships between different domains, whether technical, linguistic,
sociocultural, or political. Different approaches to terraforming in the
novel are encapsulated in ecological images that stage a struggle between
visions of the future.

Terraforming narratives of the 1960s and 1970s follow Dune’s lead in
incorporating ecology into their structure, and they reflect more often on
the controversial foundations from which new societies on other planets are
built. Along with Anderson’s “Sister Planet” and Clarke’s “Before Eden,”
such stories include Cordwainer Smith’s “When the People Fell”
(1959), [46] John Brunner’s Bedlam Planet (1968) and The Dramaturges of
Yan (1972), [47] James White’s “Major Operation” (1971), [48] and Ursula K.
Le Guin’s The Word for World Is Forest (1972) and The
Dispossessed (1974). [49] Roger Zelazny’s “The Keys to December” (1966)
exemplifies the ethical critique of terraforming that began to emerge with
greater insistence during this period. [50]

“The Keys to December” is the story of Jarry Dark, a human modified by
General Mining to facilitate the terragouging of the ice planet Alyonal,
which is destroyed in an unanticipated nova. Valuable wards of General
Mining, Dark and his companion Sanza are dispatched to terraform Alyonal II
over a period of thousands of years. They use a stasis machine to sleep
away the centuries, waking intermittently to observe the changes to Alyonal
II and the evolutionary adaptations that indigenous life-forms undergo to
cope with the radical climate change Dark and Sanza initiate. One of the
indigenous life-forms displays the hallmarks of intelligence and culture;
Dark teaches them how to talk and attempts to convince General Mining to
desist in terraforming the planet. Sanza is the first to remark that "'[w]e
may be doing a terrible thing […] [c]reating men, then destroying them.
Once, when I was feeling low, you told me that we were the gods of this
world, that ours was the power to shape and to break.'" Terraforming is a
trope of creation: of worlds, societies, and cultures. Terraforming
narratives often undermine the notion of a divine humanity empowered
through advanced technology to exercise complete control over their
environment. After Sanza’s sacrifice to save Dark from mauling by a
creature of Alyonal II—one that their terraforming efforts had created—Dark
begins to defend the indigenous life against General Mining’s terraforming
project, initially by appealing to their sense of conscience, then through
acts of sabotage. Dark’s motive for subverting the project foregrounds how
intelligent life is responsible for a different act of creation: the
sentient life of Alyonal II invest him with religious significance, leading
Dark to accept the responsibility this deification entails. By ensuring the
continued survival of Alyonal II’s indigenous life, he exiles himself from
the promise which he shared with Sanza: the anticipation inherent in the
fact that, from their perspective, "[t]hey knew they would turn [Alyonal
II] to heaven" at the cost of the lives of others. [51]

The Ecological Turn in Terraforming and Geoengineering Narratives

Terraforming narratives began to adapt yet again to the scientific insights
afforded by such events as the 1969 Moon landing and the Mariner and Viking
missions. One tradition that expanded throughout the 1970s and 1980s was
that of the bodily modification of colonists to enable the habitation of
other planets, otherwise known as “pantropy”—a term coined by James Blish
in his 1942 story “Surface Tension.” [52] The theme had appeared in
Stapledon’s Last and First Men and Star Maker, Bradbury’s The Martian
Chronicles, Miller’s “Cruxifixus Etiam,” and Zelazny’s “The Keys to
December.” Terraforming and pantropy are often presented as two
alternatives to the colonisation of space. In many works of terraforming it
often functions as a complementary technology: the microcosm of the
modification of bodies is supplemented by the macrocosm of the modification
of planetary bodies.

Frederick Pohl’s Man Plus (1976) uses the trope of a cyborged protagonist
to make credible the demands of planetary adaptation in the context of the
new scientific knowledge of the planet. [53] John Varley’s collection of
stories, Good-Bye, Robinson Crusoe and Other Stories (2013), [54] and Bruce
Sterling’s Shaper / Mechanist universe extend this trend.[55] Focussing on
organic adaptations as opposed to cybernetic, David Gerrold’s Moonstar
Odyssey (1977), [56] Joan Slonczewski’s A Door Into Ocean (1986), [57] and
Octavia Butler’s Dawn (1987), Adulthood Rites (1987), and Imago (1989,
collected as Lilith’s Brood) [58] offer grotesque biological images of
pantropy that explore alternative modes of adaptation which promise to
embed societies firmly into pre-existing and new ecological networks.

It is at this time that the terraforming narrative begins a
re-consolidation that incorporates the developments of the 1960s-1970s
ecological turn. Michael Allaby and James Lovelock’s The Greening of
Mars (1984) firmly associates terraforming with Lovelock’s own Gaia
hypothesis, a scientific notion which he began to disseminate to the public
in the 1970s. [59] The Gaia hypothesis postulates that Earth is an
integrated feedback system in which life plays a crucial role in regulating
the planet’s processes. This idea resonates with living world stories
published throughout the early twentieth century, a theme that often
dovetailed with terraforming.

The Greening of Mars is a utopian novel written in the tradition of
Heinlein’s Farmer in the Sky. It promotes a “greening” that opts for
ecopoietic models of planetary adaptation as opposed to industrial methods.
Frederick Turner, a poet who participated in the 1991 terraforming workshop
at NASA’s Ames Research Centre, cites Lovelock’s influence in his 1988 epic
poem of terraforming, Genesis. [60] He has written a novel of
terraforming, A Double Shadow (1978), an epic poem about a future America
of independent county-states, The New World (1985), and an epic poem of
climate change and geoengineering entitled Apocalypse (2016). [61] Turner
has been influential in shaping the image of terraforming in the
twenty-first century through his dialogue with scientists and other SF
writers such as Kim Stanley Robinson, although Robinson had not
read Genesis by the time he completed Green Mars (1993). [62] Other works
of terraforming in this tradition include Pamela Sargent’s Venus of
Dreams (1986), Venus of Shadows (1988), and Child of Venus (2001). [63]

Kim Stanley Robinson’s Red Mars (1992), Green Mars (1993), and Blue
Mars (1996) are widely considered to be the most accomplished terraforming
narratives of the twentieth century. [64] The Mars trilogy fully embraces
the inheritance of environmental thought that the terraforming tradition
nurtured over the course of its history. Other works such as The
Martians (1999) and 2312 (2012) extend his thinking about terraforming,
while The Wild Shore (1984), The Gold Coast (1988), Pacific
Edge (1990),Antarctica (1997), Forty Signs of Rain (2004), Fifty Degrees
Below (2005), and Sixty Days and Counting (2007)—the final three adapted
as Green Earth (2015)—make connections between ecological thought about
terraforming and that of climate change and geoengineering. [65]Robinson’s
work has inspired others to engage in dialogue about the ethics of
terraforming and the responsibilities that are demanded by the full
implications of ecological relationships. Brian Aldiss and Roger
Penrose’s White Mars(1999) is perhaps the most direct engagement with
Robinson’s trilogy. [66] White Mars outlines a strong non-interventionist
orientation that argues against terraforming, and as such it recalls the
political faction known as the Reds in Robinson’s own Mars trilogy and
their desire to leave Mars as unspoilt as possible.

Terraforming and Geoengineering in the Twenty-First Century

There have been an increasing number of terraforming and geoengineering
narratives published after the success of Robinson’s Mars trilogy. Gardner
Dozois’ Worldmakers: SF Adventures in Terraforming collects twenty short
stories published throughout the twentieth century, thus making salient a
tradition that has only recently gained widespread public attention in the
context of geoengineering and climate change. [67] Norman
Spinrad’s Greenhouse Summer (1999) explores the corporatisation of
geoengineering processes and the Machiavellian politics that arise as
nations attempt to ameliorate the effects of climate change in ways that
cause undesirable consequences for others. [68] Linda Nagata’s “Goddesses”
(2000) explores geoengineering as a form of mitigation in the light of the
increasing toxicity of the environment and climate change. [69] While many
discussions of mitigation suggest that geoengineering offers an appropriate
technological fix, Nagata’s story highlights how geoengineering can
function as an alibi for avoiding much-needed economic and societal
restructurings that would have far-reaching implications for mitigation.
Karl Schroeder’s Ventus (2000) explores the connection between cybernetics,
ecology, and philosophical thought about the environment and the human
projection of anthropocentric values onto nature. [70] Liz Williams’s Ghost
Sister (2001) similarly interrogates the anthropocentric basis that
encourages schemes for terraforming. [71]

Jack Williamson returns to the theme with his collection of
novellas, Terraforming Earth (2001), [72] which emphasise the plasticity of
biology, ecology, and geology in the context of sweeping spans of time,
again recalling the expansive future histories of Stapledon. Similarly,
Robert Reed’s powerful story, “A History of Terraforming” (2010), looks
backward over the terraforming tradition and records—through the life story
of one who eventually attains the highest position of authority and respect
as a terraformer—the movement from industrial to ecological approaches to
terraforming, and the concomitant responsibilities that this places upon
those wishing to adapt environments for their own purposes. [73] Ian
McDonald has returned to the terraforming theme that he touched upon
in Desolation Road (1988) and other works with his diptych concerning the
power struggles of corporate families in Luna: New Moon (2015) and the
forthcoming Luna: Wolf Moon (expected 2016). [74] McDonald, too, speaks
back to the terraforming tradition by alluding to Herbert’s Dune and
Heinlein’s The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress while challenging their assumptions
regarding the necessities that societies are called upon to accept in order
to adapt to unforgiving environments.

While scientific speculation about terraforming and feasibility studies
into geoengineering often ignore the implications of adapting other
planets, research projects such as the SPICE project have partnered with
social scientists to investigate the social and ethical dimensions of
geoengineering. [75] Terraforming and geoengineering stories, however, have
long explored the ramifications of technical transformations to the
environment, and they are able to stage scenarios with the scope to imagine
an array of social, technical, economic, and political modifications to
society. This range enacts at the macro-level of the SF tradition what
Stapledon achieved at the micro-level of the text. Taken as a whole, texts
in the terraforming tradition speak to each other. They challenge the
assumptions and consequences of the organisational structure of societies
and the ways they relate to nature, and they attempt to reimagine the
assumptions of earlier stories in accordance with different conceptions of
society and nature. In doing so they offer critiques that encourage thought
about alternatives that would promote modes of engagement with nature that
move beyond sustainability to explore the bases of humankind’s relationship
with the external world and with beings within that world.

Terraforming narratives incorporate reflections on sustainability and,
further, lead us to reflect on the meaning of nature, culture, and the
environment in ways that prompt us to begin the first steps to
reconceptualising our relationship to a nature that has interlocking global
and local implications and effects. The terraforming tradition scrutinises
the social implications of adaptation in ways that could inform how we
conceptualise contemporary, real-world attempts at geoengineering, allowing
us to factor in issues of disregard for local communities that are
important to consider in the contemporary context of climate change.
Terraforming and geoengineering stories can be seen as establishing
scenarios for thinking about the impact of widespread change, whether that
change is societal, cultural, technological, or a confluence of all three.
They are therefore important reservoirs of knowledge—archives that could
help inform individual and policy orientations and action. Given the
recognition of considerable popular resistance to terraforming, joined to
calls for social research and engagement on the part of those exploring
options for geoengineering, such an archive represents an important body of
philosophical thought about the practicalities and ethics of relating to
and adapting to planetary environments.

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[19] Ibid. p. 67.

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[28] Manning, Laurence. The Man Who Awoke. New York: Ballantine, 1979
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[29] Fearn, John Russell. “Earth’s Mausoleum.” Astounding Stories 15.3
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[30] Williamson. Seetee Ship. London: Mayflower, 1969 [1950] and Seetee
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[31] Kuttner, Henry [and C. L. Moore]. Fury. London: Gollancz, 2000 [1950].

[32] Vance, Jack. “I’ll Build Your Dream Castle.” In The World Thinker and
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[33] Bradbury, Ray. The Martian Chronicles. New York: Doubleday, 1958
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[34] Heinlein, Robert. Farmer in the Sky. London: Pan Books, 1967 [1950].

[35] Benford, Gregory. Jupiter Project. London: Sphere, 1982 [1975].

[36] Heinlein. The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress. London: Gollancz, 2001 [1966].

[37] Clarke, Arthur C. The Sands of Mars. London: Sidgwick & Jackson, 1976
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[38] Asimov, Isaac. “The Martian Way.” In Ben Bova (ed.), The Science
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[39] Miller, Walter M. “Crucifixus Etiam.” In The View from the Stars.
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[43] Herbert, Frank. Dune. Kent: New English Library, 1965.

[44] SPICE: Stratospheric Particle Injection for Climate Engineering (2016)
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[46] Smith, Cordwainer. “When the People Fell.” In Gardner Dozois
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[47] Brunner, John. Bedlam Planet. New York: Ballantine Books, 1982 [1968]
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[50] Zelazny, Roger. “The Keys to December.” In Gardner Dozois
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[51] Ibid., pp. 110, 103.

[52] Blish, James. “Surface Tension.” Galaxy Science Fiction 4.5 (1952).
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[53] Pohl, Frederik. Man Plus. London: Gollancz, 2000 [1976].

[54] Varley, John. Good-Bye, Robinson Crusoe and Other Stories. Michigan:
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[55] See, for example, Sterling, Bruce. "Sunken Gardens." In Gardner Dozois
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[56] Gerrold, David. Moonstar Odyssey. New York: New American Library, 1977.

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[59] Allaby, Michael, and James Lovelock. The Greening of Mars. New York:
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[60] Turner, Frederick. Genesis: An Epic Poem. Frederick Turner’s
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[61] Turner, Frederick. A Double Shadow. New York: Putnam, 1978, The New
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[62] Robinson, Kim Stanley. Green Mars. London: Voyager, 1996 [1993].

[63] Sargent, Pamela. Venus of Dreams. London: Bantam, 1989 [1986], Venus
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[64] Robinson, Kim Stanley. Red Mars. London: Voyager, 1996 [1992], Green
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[65] Robinson, Kim Stanley. The Martians. London: Voyager, 2000
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[66] Aldiss, Brian and Roger Penrose. White Mars; or, The Mind Set Free, a
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[67] Dozois, Gardner (ed.). Worldmakers: SF Adventures in Terraforming. New
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[68] Spinrad, Norman. Greenhouse Summer. New York: Tor, 1999.

[69] Nagata, Linda. “Goddesses.” In Goddesses & Other Stories. Kula: Mythic
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[70] Schroeder, Karl. Ventus. New York: Tom Doherty Associates, 2000.

[71] Williams, Liz. Ghost Sister. New York: Bantam Books, 2001.

[72] Williamson, Jack. Terraforming Earth. New York: Tom Doherty
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[73] Reed, Robert. “A History of Terraforming.” Asimov’s Science Fiction
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[74] McDonald, Ian. Desolation Road. Birmingham: Drunken Dragon Press, 1990
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[75] With funding from the Economic and Social Research Council, the SPICE
project is collaborating with Dr. Jack Stilgoe from University College
London to investigate stakeholder opinion into the ethics and social
consequences of solar radiation management. SPICE: Stratospheric Particle
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August 2016].

Copyright © 2016 Chris Pak

Chris Pak is editor of the Science Fiction Research Association's SFRA
Review and the author of Terraforming: Ecopolitical Transformations and
Environmentalism in Science Fiction, published by Liverpool University
Press. For more information and links to articles and reviews, visit his
website at http://chrispak.wix.com/chrispak. He can be reached at
[email protected].

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