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The Anthropocene unconscious: Climate anxieties in suburban SF

Bould, Mark

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Authors

Mark Bould Mark.Bould@uwe.ac.uk
Professor of Film and Literature



Abstract

If the Anthropocene is the unconscious of the art, literature, and media of our time, then sf films that are not overtly about climate change will nonetheless express Anthropocenic concerns. In Marjorie Prime (2017), an intense inward focus on the domestic bourgeois subject replicates the defining foundational error of what Amitav Ghosh calls the “serious literary novel,” the feature that prevents it from properly addressing climate change. It ends with all the humans gone and three AI/holograms talking to each other against a backdrop of weird weather. The Tomorrow War (2021) establishes a series of parallels between alien invaders and climate change, but nonetheless unthinkingly depicts suburban life, a key driver of fossil fuel consumption, as a utopia to be preserved. In The Purge (DeMonaco 2013), the armored suburban home, situated within the context of settler colonialism, becomes a microcosm of the nation state in the era of climate destabilization.

Citation

Bould, M. (2023). The Anthropocene unconscious: Climate anxieties in suburban SF. Science Fiction Film and Television, 16(3), 251–275. https://doi.org/10.3828/sfftv.2023.15

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jun 20, 2023
Online Publication Date Oct 8, 2023
Publication Date Dec 1, 2023
Deposit Date Jan 26, 2024
Publicly Available Date Jan 31, 2024
Journal Science Fiction Film and Television
Print ISSN 1754-3770
Publisher Liverpool University Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 16
Issue 3
Pages 251–275
DOI https://doi.org/10.3828/sfftv.2023.15
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/11628380

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