新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis鈥 top graduating senior, Jumana Esau, has long been drawn to imagined stories. Her studies at the university have focused on Palestinian injustices, African futuristic works, and the struggles of climate refugees from developing countries. She hopes to use climate fiction to expose inequities and change the world, a goal she鈥檒l be pursuing this fall at the University of Cambridge.
(Learn more about Esau: 鈥淭op 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis Graduate to Pursue Studies in Climate Change Fiction.鈥)
Amid wrapping up finals and preparing to graduate, Esau took a moment to share with us her thoughts on climate fiction, and she gave us some great book recommendations.
What led you to this path of study?
I have always been interested in the emotional dimensions of literature and how that impacts our perception of social issues. Climate change is a particularly relevant issue since it is so polarizing.
Professor 鈥淐limate Fiction鈥 course led me down this particular path, since I did not know that a genre of literature about climate change existed.
Although climate change itself is difficult to narrate and represent, stories of climate fiction involve emotions just like any other story: hope, dread, apprehension, etc. I wanted to explore how our affective orientation toward literature and imagined worlds can help with issues that people are facing in discussing climate change. These novels give expression to a moment of planetary crisis without immobilizing their readers with fear.
Jumana Esau. (Karin Higgins/新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis)
In what ways do you think fiction can serve the very real challenges of climate change and climate justice?
When news articles explore possible futures of the world based on emissions, or warn against specific actions, they engage in speculative fiction-making.
My thesis advisor, Professor Menely, discussed the power of climate fiction by stating that our world is organized around narrative. For instance, politicians cannot win elections without an engaging story. Climate fiction narratives are another way we can come face-to-face with a possible future produced by our actions in the present.
Kim Stanley Robinson鈥檚 New York 2140 provides a hopeful future where we adapt, whereas Omar El Akkad鈥檚 American War presents a somewhat more cynical story. Both are necessary to engage with when thinking about how climate change will impact our standard way of life or exacerbate social issues.
As someone who wants to better the lives of others, I turn to fiction because, according to literary theorist Kenneth Burke, it acts as our 鈥渆quipment for living.鈥 We use fiction to imagine solutions to the problems of our changing Earth. Creating stories is a first step to action, acting as a kind of preparation for us by projecting strategies for dealing with situations.
What are some of your favorite and most influential books in this realm?
- Broken Earth Trilogy
- Who Fears Death?
- Parable of the Sower
- American War
Thanks so much. And best of luck to you at Cambridge!
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is an environmental science writer and media relations specialist at 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis. She鈥檚 the editor of the 鈥淲hat Can I Do About Climate Change?鈥 blog.