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Violent Climate Imaginaries: Science-Fiction-Politics

Benner, Ann-Kathrin ; Rothe, Delf ; Ullström, Sara LU orcid and Stripple, Johannes LU (2019) In IFSH Research Report #001
Abstract
There are many ways in which climate futures can be envisioned, such asglobal and regional climate models, scenarios of future emission trajectories, orpathways and visions of societal transformation. All these anticipatory practicesaim to make the climatic future knowable in the present. In so doing, they quiteoften envision a climatic future that is inherently violent: a future marked bydisasters, wars, mass migration, turmoil, and terror. This working paper seeksto explain the popularity and tenacity of such violent imaginaries of (future)climate change in scientific research, popular culture, and political discourse.For this, it asks two interrelated questions: First, how do violent imaginaries offuture climate change come about?... (More)
There are many ways in which climate futures can be envisioned, such asglobal and regional climate models, scenarios of future emission trajectories, orpathways and visions of societal transformation. All these anticipatory practicesaim to make the climatic future knowable in the present. In so doing, they quiteoften envision a climatic future that is inherently violent: a future marked bydisasters, wars, mass migration, turmoil, and terror. This working paper seeksto explain the popularity and tenacity of such violent imaginaries of (future)climate change in scientific research, popular culture, and political discourse.For this, it asks two interrelated questions: First, how do violent imaginaries offuture climate change come about? Second, why and how do these imaginariescirculate and proliferate? To answer these questions, the paper provides adiscussion of the concept of “violence” and elaborates how different forms ofit are featured in imaginaries of future climate change. On this basis, the paperthen traces three different modes of future-making that together produce andreproduce violent climate imaginaries: modeling the future, writing the future,and visualizing the future. Finally, the paper proposes and discusses severalfactors that could help explaining the circulation of violent climate imaginariesbetween the fields of science, fiction, and politics. These factors include theexistence of an interdiscourse that bridges different specialized discourses, thebroader political economy of imaginaries, interpersonal relations between actorsin different fields, and the coproduction of dominant imaginaries with broadertechnological developments. (Less)
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author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Book/Report
publication status
published
subject
in
IFSH Research Report #001
pages
40 pages
publisher
Institute for Peace Research and Security Policy, University of Hamburg
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
0bf66599-1837-4898-867e-36acabb0cbf7
alternative location
https://ifsh.de/file/publication/Research_Report/191218_IFSH_Research_Report_Web.pdf
date added to LUP
2020-02-19 10:26:47
date last changed
2021-05-07 07:46:40
@techreport{0bf66599-1837-4898-867e-36acabb0cbf7,
  abstract     = {{There are many ways in which climate futures can be envisioned, such asglobal and regional climate models, scenarios of future emission trajectories, orpathways and visions of societal transformation. All these anticipatory practicesaim to make the climatic future knowable in the present. In so doing, they quiteoften envision a climatic future that is inherently violent: a future marked bydisasters, wars, mass migration, turmoil, and terror. This working paper seeksto explain the popularity and tenacity of such violent imaginaries of (future)climate change in scientific research, popular culture, and political discourse.For this, it asks two interrelated questions: First, how do violent imaginaries offuture climate change come about? Second, why and how do these imaginariescirculate and proliferate? To answer these questions, the paper provides adiscussion of the concept of “violence” and elaborates how different forms ofit are featured in imaginaries of future climate change. On this basis, the paperthen traces three different modes of future-making that together produce andreproduce violent climate imaginaries: modeling the future, writing the future,and visualizing the future. Finally, the paper proposes and discusses severalfactors that could help explaining the circulation of violent climate imaginariesbetween the fields of science, fiction, and politics. These factors include theexistence of an interdiscourse that bridges different specialized discourses, thebroader political economy of imaginaries, interpersonal relations between actorsin different fields, and the coproduction of dominant imaginaries with broadertechnological developments.}},
  author       = {{Benner, Ann-Kathrin and Rothe, Delf and Ullström, Sara and Stripple, Johannes}},
  institution  = {{Institute for Peace Research and Security Policy, University of Hamburg}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  series       = {{IFSH Research Report #001}},
  title        = {{Violent Climate Imaginaries: Science-Fiction-Politics}},
  url          = {{https://ifsh.de/file/publication/Research_Report/191218_IFSH_Research_Report_Web.pdf}},
  year         = {{2019}},
}