Book contents
- Climate Change, Literature, and Environmental Justice
- Climate Change, Literature, and Environmental Justice
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction “A Fault Line of Pain”
- Chapter 1 “Fear of a Black Planet”
- Chapter 2 Ghosts and Reparations
- Chapter 3 Mapping and Memory
- Chapter 4 “Bodies Tell Stories”
- Chapter 5 Round Dance and Resistance
- Chapter 6 “Slow Insurrection”
- Chapter 7 Cannibal Spirits and Sacred Seeds
- Epilogue “Everyday Micro-utopias”
- Works Cited
- Index
Epilogue - “Everyday Micro-utopias”
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 April 2021
- Climate Change, Literature, and Environmental Justice
- Climate Change, Literature, and Environmental Justice
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction “A Fault Line of Pain”
- Chapter 1 “Fear of a Black Planet”
- Chapter 2 Ghosts and Reparations
- Chapter 3 Mapping and Memory
- Chapter 4 “Bodies Tell Stories”
- Chapter 5 Round Dance and Resistance
- Chapter 6 “Slow Insurrection”
- Chapter 7 Cannibal Spirits and Sacred Seeds
- Epilogue “Everyday Micro-utopias”
- Works Cited
- Index
Summary
“Everyday Micro-utopias” recapitulates themes from Climate Change, Literature, and Environmental Justice through an examination of pedagogy as a form of what Rebecca Solnit terms “building paradise” in the classroom. I draw on my experience teaching a class on climate change over the past several years, where my students and I remain in the presence of the unbearable grief of climate change, displacements, relocations, and extinctions. The course is a space to imaginine collective responses to climate change that carve what Nicolas Bourriad calls “micro-utopias” within the status quo. I offer a notated syllabus with readings, assignment notes, and the narrative that binds the course together. In the final pages of the epilogue, I turn to N. K. Jemisin’s Broken Earth speculative trilogy, which imagines revolutions of the enslaved that end the world and make possible a new beginning anchored in the archeology of past insurrection.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Climate Change, Literature, and Environmental JusticePoetics of Dissent and Repair, pp. 178 - 188Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021