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climatejustice.social

Zeitpunkt              Nutzer    Delta   Tröts        TNR     Titel                     Version  maxTL
So 08.09.2024 00:01:08     9.904       0      584.509    59,0 Climate Justice Social    4.2.1... 5.000
Sa 07.09.2024 00:01:05     9.904       0      584.044    59,0 Climate Justice Social    4.2.1... 5.000
Fr 06.09.2024 00:01:07     9.904      -1      583.392    58,9 Climate Justice Social    4.2.1... 5.000
Do 05.09.2024 00:01:07     9.905      +1      582.489    58,8 Climate Justice Social    4.2.1... 5.000
Mi 04.09.2024 00:00:31     9.904      +2      581.775    58,7 Climate Justice Social    4.2.1... 5.000
Di 03.09.2024 00:00:53     9.902      -1      581.023    58,7 Climate Justice Social    4.2.1... 5.000
Mo 02.09.2024 00:01:13     9.903      +2      580.303    58,6 Climate Justice Social    4.2.1... 5.000
So 01.09.2024 00:01:13     9.901      +1      579.468    58,5 Climate Justice Social    4.2.1... 5.000
Sa 31.08.2024 00:01:07     9.900       0      578.928    58,5 Climate Justice Social    4.2.1... 5.000
Fr 30.08.2024 00:01:08     9.900       0      578.187    58,4 Climate Justice Social    4.2.1... 5.000

So 08.09.2024 01:30

Season 4 episode 9: The Fantasies of Post-apocalyptic Dystopian Fiction, with Ariel Kroon

Classic, post-apocalyptic, dystopian fiction is a type of fantasy where we’re dreaming of starting over in an empty landscape from a societal and cultural slate wiped clean by some devastating event that we don’t have to feel guilty about having happened—at least, it is according to our very own Ariel Kroon, who does, yes, have a PhD in it.* Yet, at the same time, these fantasies generally suffer from a strange lack of imagination, wherein the characters use the “fresh new start” to recreate the same old society, albeit with themselves at the top, with the same old systemic socioeconomic, environmental, and structural problems.

It’s almost as if it is easy to dream up apocalypse but next to impossible to envision a different way of living. Although a failure of imagination would most likely look different for solarpunk, can solarpunk creators and dreamers of a positive future avoid falling into the same sort of trap?

*Post-apocalyptic Canadian science-fiction 1948-1989, she wants to clarify. She’s even got the thesis to prove it.

youtu.be/IdouMiiRoWc?si=fJgNd4

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