Monday, January 22, 2018

Federico Kukso in Argentina on this theme: CAN FICTION HELP FIGHT AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE?"

https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clima_ficci%C3%B3n#Bibliograf%C3%ADa

Can fiction help us combat climate change?

JG Ballard and Margaret Atwood, among others, and now many 
novelists ecological disasters have reported 
that since the empathy that generates a story, 
perhaps arouse greater awareness of the risks of global warming
Federico Kukso 
 1 january 21, 2018
EXCERPT in ENGLISH TRANSLATION 
via Google Translate Machine
Credit: Pablo Feliz



...Climate change and turbulence literature. 
And now, with warmth, a certain sector of literature seeks not so much change the weather -so altered for more than 150 years ago by human beings but rather to channel the global conversation, encourage adaptation to the climate crisis that already throbs and it is forecast to get worse. "Climate change not only affects the climate. It involves political, economic, cultural changes. It is already causing displaced, new refugees, riots," says the Italian writer Bruno Arpaia. His novel,Something out there -recently presented in the cycle "Narratives of reality" of the National University of San Martin, is around 2070, when the planet has warmed while the United States and some parts of Europe they have collapsed to drought and desertification. Amid political, economic and military, masses of refugees escaping conflict, seeking to reach the new paradise: the Nordic countries, Siberia or Canada, benefiting areas climate changes. "It's not about a dystopian and apocalyptic novel he insists. It is a realistic novel. I pose scenarios that scientists foresee, what will happen if we do nothing."
When JG Ballard wrote The submerged world (1962), the words "global warming" had not yet entered the public vocabulary, shaken more by terms such as "acid rain" and "thermonuclear war". The funeral charm of sunken cities and the subtle atmosphere of melancholy that enveloped the last vestiges of an almost lost civilization forever fascinated the English writer who, in his way, was ahead of what until 2004 the American journalist Dan Bloom coined ther term " cli-fi "or climate fiction; that is, stories that they borrow from their didactic fables intended to ethical and universal character to explore imaginary future, warn climate scenarios that await us and amplify the debate.
"The succession of huge geological upheavals that transformed the Earth's climate had begun sixty or seventy years ago," JG Ballard wrote  in his novel. "The average temperature rose a few degrees per year, worldwide. The tropics were soon uninhabitable and entire populations migrated, escaping at temperatures of 50 and 60 degrees. [...] Continued warming had begun to melt the polar ice caps. Tens of thousands of floes of the Arctic circle, Greenland and northern Europe spilled into the sea. "

Direct emotions

Unlike the daily bombing and depressive temperature increases, megatormentas, polar melting, ecological disasters and other tragedies that its saturating effect-and disturbing-shake our indifference rather than call to action, this rising new literary genre climate-themed novels appeal empathy and amend what many psychiatrists already know: the facts and information alone will not change our opinions on a topic.
We are more emotional than rational beings. Through his dramatic scaffolding, the cli-finovels are able to bring about a transformation: manage climate change - a problem considered abstract, alien, distant, inabarcable- an urgent threat, close, all becomes. "The goal is to reach people with -Indicates Bloom- emotions. Attract not only climate activists but also some of the deniers".
In 2005, the British writer Robert Macfarlane in a Guardian essay titled THE BURNING QUESTION asked, "Where are the novels, plays, poems, songs, on our contemporary climate anxiety?". Gradually emerges an answer. [Note, also in 2005, American activist Bill McKibben also wrote a similar essay in Grist magazine with the exact same theme and topic as the essay Macfarlane wrote. The topic was in the air. They both caught it at the same time, more or less'
Ian McEwan was dispatched with his scientific satire Solar. Social chaos and despair caused by environmental disasters seeped into the trilogy of novels Oryx and Crake, the year of the flood and MaddAdam, Margaret Atwood; Also, in Far North ecoapocalíptica, Marcel Theroux; Back to the Garden, Canadian Clara Hume; Odds Against Tomorrow,Nathaniel Rich, and the amazing novels Paolo Bacigalupi The Windup Girl and The Water Knife.
"History shows that the worst crises can lead to unity , " said the Finnish novelist Antti Tuomainen, who in his novel The Healer escapes the cliches of the disaster literature and unveiled a cli-fi thriller: the story of a murderer who kills family employers to blame for the constant rains, epidemics, the crisis of climate refugees in Helsinki and in the world.

.....Kim Stanley Robinson has proven to be one of the most present and strong voices in this field so often disparaged from the ivory tower of high literature. After getting tired of imagining human expansion for our small solar system (for example, in his trilogy Red Mars, Green Mars and Blue Mars), this American writer returned to Earth dream. In his ambitious and recent New York 2140, situated in a future not too distant or too close, climate change has worsened and millions of people have died. The waters rose about 15 meters and much of the Big Apple has become a "SuperVenecia". The great enemy is savage capitalism, greed, inequality. Unlike news headlines and weather feed our nihilism and choke us with heaping images of desperation, Robinson injected into his book necessary dose of optimism: despite the ecological disaster, New Yorkers manage to adapt. The climate crisis shakes the lives of thousands, but does not mean the end of civilization. "Life is robust writes the author. It is stronger than money, that weapons and bad policies. It is stronger than capitalism. With climate change will not end the world. That means that climate change we will have are dealing with a lot of new problems, but the apocalypse has come. "

Living in fiction

Since traveled to Antarctica in 1995 and was surprised by what he saw, Robinson has been obsessed with climate change. In his trilogy Science in the Capital -written during the presidency of George W. Bush and also located in the cercano- future ecological catastrophe strikes Washington: first, the overflowing of the Potomac River, and then days of clashes between untie deep freeze researchers and bureaucrats of a system that denies the reality and resist policy change. "My original idea was to write a realistic novel as if it counts science fiction. This approach seemed the most appropriate because these days we live in a science fiction novel that we are writing together."
As the biosphere, the solar system, a black hole or Internet, the British philosopher Timothy Morton who teaches now in Texas sees climate change as a very big topic which is such a big phenomenon in time and space that we can not grasp or understand fully . We see only blurred fragments. Only through the humanities-the art, music, literature-says, we feel our new reality and thus leave only thinking about climate change to begin to feel crumbles around our planet, becoming less hospitable world like we had taken for granted.

Sunday, May 3, 2015

''Cli-fi'' et le vocabulaire littéraire française

''Cli-fi'' et le vocabulaire littéraire française

 UPDATE: It's online !

http://traqueurstellaire.tumblr.com/post/118849011397/la-cli-fi-et-le-vocabulaire-litteraire
[Cette self-interview a été réalisée en mai 2015.]
READ THIS FIRST:
 
 
QUESTION : Aujourd'hui, j'aimerais introduire américaine journalist Dan Bloom, "an honorrary Frenchman" qui vivaient en France pendant les 1960s and 1970s , et qui dit beaucoup de son intérêt pour la littérature et cinéma provient de ses liens étroits avec la France au cours des 50 dernières années. Cependant, son nom n'est pas connu dans les cercles littéraires Français ou à l'intérieur de la communauté journalistique français, et j'aimerais ajouter cette interview dans le ragoût en ligne afin que des intellectuels français et critiques littéraires peuvent apprendre à connaître cette homme qui juge de la France sa seconde patrie, depuis qu'il a fait un séjour chez l'habitant à Rouen en 1965 lors d'un adolescent de 16 ans de Boston. Bienvenue, Dan Bloom.
DAN BLOOM : Merci d'avoir pris le temps de parler avec moi à ce sujet.
QUESTION : Donc me parler, et mes lecteurs français, comment êtes-vous devenu ''an honorary Frenchman,'' et ce que vous voulez dire que par, et comment avez-vous comme un Américain qui lit et parle semi-couramment le français et qui aime la culture française et le peuple français venu d'envisager la France comme votre deuxième pays?
DAN BLOOM: Bonne question. J'ai commencé à apprendre le français à l'école secondaire aux USA quand j'avais 14 ans, et j'ai fait un séjour chez l'habitant au cours de la summmer de 1965, en prenant un navire de Boston à la France avec un groupe d'étudiants du secondaire pour une visite de deux mois à Rouen et à Paris. C'était le début de mon intérêt pour la France en tant que culture et en tant que nation, lorsque j'avais 16 ans, et j'ai vécu dans une famille française pendant un mois à Rouen. Je suis également tombé en amour avec une jeune Française à Rouen, dont le visage je me souviens encore de ce jour, bien que je n'ai jamais vu depuis.
QUESTION : L'amour est toujours une bonne façon d'apprendre à connaître un pays différent, oui.


​DAN BLOOM: Oui, dans la façon dont un adolescent ciments son imagination et traverses de mentalité. Plus tard, au collège, à  Tufts University à Boston, j'ai étudié le français pendant une autre période de quatre ans, la littérature et le cinéma et la culture, et l'un de mes professeurs, il y avait une femme française nommée Celia Bertin, un écrivain, décédé dernièrement à l'âge de 94 ans, un ami lifelone et muse de moi, et il était Celia qui vraiment m'a accueillie dans Frenchy culture et littérature. Elle a été mon professeur, mon mentor, mon oeuvre littéraire muse. Et un très bon ami à vie. Elle a épousé un homme américain à Boston nommé Jerry et partage son temps entre Paris et Boston au fil des ans. Elle mourut à Paris en 2014.
QUESTION : Quelle a été l'influence de Celia Bertin sur votre et créer les coing ''cli-fi'' pour ''à terme de genre climate-change fiction"? Était-ce une influence directe ou indirecte type d'influence?
DAN BLOOM : Celia était un romancier de Editions Grasset, et un biographe de Freud et de Napoléon. Elle a été invitée à touffes en 1960 pour être un écrivain en résidence à la Collège d'arts libéraux à Boston et depuis j'ai toujours été accroché autour du département français office, où l'un de mes professeurs Dr. Simches avait une cour et Dr Simches inspiré plusieurs générations d'étudiants Tufts, j'ai rencontré Celia Bertin il y tout d'abord, lorsque le Dr Simches m'a présenté à son. Immédiatement, nous avons développé une amitié, et bien que je n'ai jamais pris une classe avec elle, nous avons passé de nombreuses heures à Boston et plus tard à Paris parle de la vie, l'amour, la littérature, la culture, l'histoire de la Résistance française et de l'Holocauste (dans la résistance était Celia comme une jeune femme et elle m'a dit de nombreuses histoires à propos de sa vie puis), les films français et des intellectuels français comme Sartre et de Beauvoir et Camus. Elle les connaissait, et elle m'a raconté des histoires à leur sujet. Elle savait Matisse et Henri Cartier-Bresson. J'ai donc appris de première main de Celia au sujet de ces gens. À l'été de 1969, je suis allé à Paris pour mon "junior year abroad" de Tufts, et grâce à Celia, j'ai vécu une partie de leur premier été là avec la famille de Bernard Privat, ecrivain et editeur et CEO  de Editions Grasset. Celia m'a présenté à M. Privat comme jeune Américain étudiant qui rêvaient d'un écrivain, un jour, et il a bien voulu m'a donné une chambre à son domicile pendant deux mois. J'ai mangé le repas avec la famille chaque soir et le petit déjeuner le matin, et sa fille qui s'était intéressé à la science-fiction romans, est devenu un ami. J'ai perdu contact avec sa maintenant et j'espère pouvoir trouver son nouveau un jour ou l'autre. Peut-être que cette entrevue nous réunira de nouveau? Qui sait?
QUESTION : Qu'avez-vous fait à Paris en 1969 comme un collège de 20 ans étudiant d'Amérique?
DAN BLOOM: Je n'en prenais pas classes. J'ai tout juste de vivre ma vie. La guerre du Vietnam se passait alors, mon pays, l'Amérique, et j'étais un manifestant anti-guerre et refusent de se battre contre cette guerre insensée stupide injustes, et de Paris en 1968 était juste un an plus tôt, alors je passais mes journées seulement lors de l'imbibition la vie française, la vie culturelle, littéraire, lecture, traîner dans les cafés, aller à la Cinemateque Francais presque tous les jours, parler aux gens. Un grand moment dans ma vie et j'ai adoré chaque jour.
QUESTION : Et Celia?
DAN BLOOM : Celia était de 20 ans de plus que moi, et il a été mon mentor. Elle m'a toujours dit de demeurer moi-même, mon plutôt excentrique et ludique auto, et de ne jamais céder à conformes et certains des plus stupides règles de la société, que ce soit en Amérique ou ailleurs. Donc elle reinfornced mon sens de l'enjouement et d'imagination dans la vie, et bien que je ne deviennent jamais un romancier, je me suis tourné vers le journalisme et cartooning pour mon travail en USA quand je suis rentré à mon pays.​



​QUESTION: Et de quelle façon dans votre invention de "cli-fi" relatifs à la France et à Celia Bertin et Bernard Privat et Editions Grasset?
DAN BLOOM : " J'ai créé le ''cli-fi'' terme en 2008, à l'improviste, journée froma rêve vraiment, je ne suis pas un professeur ou un théoricien littéraire ou de l'American intellectual. J'ai toujours vécu en marge de la société, comme une sorte de goofy rêveur dans l'amour avec la vie et la littérature et le cinéma, et ce que nous appelons en Hebrew "tikkun olam" qui signifie " pour réparer le monde." J'ai toujours été profondément proche de questions de justice, et j'ai souvent discuté de ces questions avec Celia Bertin à Boston et à Paris, et plus tard dans des lettres que nous avons écrit à l'autre plus tard et même dans quelques e-mails à la fin de sa vie. Ainsi "cli-fi" est venu à moi en tant que moyen de rendre le public plus conscient et préoccupé par les questions de changement climatique, ainsi qu'une ''literary platform'' pour les romanciers et réalisateurs de cinéma pour faire des histoires sur les changements climatiques d'une façon nouvelle. Cli-fi can be seen as a subgenre of sci- fi and both sci fi and cli fi are useful ways of looking at climate change issues and global warming. A propos de cli-fi,  j'ai été actif pour presque 24/7 depuis quelques années à essayer de stimuler l'expression dans le paysage médiatique de journaux et de magazines et blogs dans the USA et Australia and the UK. J'ai utilisé mon ''amateur PR skills'' pour obtenir cli fi là où elle est aujourd'hui, le lobbying rédacteurs en chef et les journalistes à écrire sur l'interface Cli fi meme. From the New York Times to Le Monde (re les articles par Louise Couvelaire et Macha Sery.) C'est comment Le Monde arrivé à mentionner la ''cli-fi'' terme en 2014 and 2015.

http://www.lemonde.fr/livres/article/2015/04/28/ecofictions-comme-s-il-en-pleuvait_4624591_3260.html
QUESTION : Ni Le Monde article vous mentionnent par nom ou n'a l'une ou l'autre des reporters essayer de vous contacter avant qu'ils rédigeaient leurs articles?
DAN BLOOM : Oui, ni l'article mentionné mon nom à tous, et c'est correct. Je ne fais pas cela pour promouvoir moi-même. Cli-fi est mon cadeau aux générations futures, comme un appel de réveil, un message d'alarme sur la problématique du changement climatique pour la littérature et le cinéma, un ''warning flare.'' Mon espoir est qu'un nouveau Neville Shute qui a écrit "ON THE BEACH" en Australie en 1957 sur la guerre nucléaire, des angoisses, mon espoir est que cli-fi genre va entraîner un certain avenir Nevil Shute, de sexe masculin ou féminin, de la France, d'Allemagne ou de la Nouvelle-Zélande ou à Taïwan ou le Canada, n'importe où, d'écrire un roman du changement climatique qui se réveille le monde de la même façon que "sur la plage" l'a fait dans les années 1950s et 1960s.
DAN BLOOM: Je ne sais pas. Mais je suis sûr qu'ils connaissaient mon nom comme ils cherché sur Google pour obtenir des informations générales sur l'interface Cli fi terme. J'imagine qu'ils n'étaient pas familières avec mon nom et a estimé la publication mon nom n'était pas pertinente à l'article qu'ils ont écrit, et je peux le comprendre. Je suis journaliste moi-même. Pas tous les détails d'un document d'actualité doivent être dans l'article final. Mon nom n'est pas important. Cli-fi n'est pas à propos de moi. Je ne suis pas écrire un roman, je ne suis pas écrire un livre non romanesque sur cli fi, je n'ai pas de droit d'auteur le terme et je n'essaie pas de marque le terme ou monétiser. Je ne suis pas intéressé à la célébrité ou de l'argent. Je suis un hippie des années 1960s dans ma pensée. Je ne suis pas dans les choses matérielles ou d'être une personne célèbre. Je n'aime pas l'argent et je n'aime pas la célébrité. Je n'ai jamais voulu faire de l'argent dans ma vie, j'ai merel voulait faire une différence. J'espère que cli-fi sera que petite différence et vivre pendant encore 100 ans après moi. Donc oui, je veux le public français à savoir via cette entrevue que j'ai appris beaucoup de mes idées littéraires de France et écrivains français et intellctuals, de Jules Verne à Julien Green, de Camus à Sartre, de Celia Bertin à Jean-Luc Godard et Francois Truffaut. Je suis un enfant de l'années 1960s.
QUESTION : Is there any other information you want to add here?



​DAN BLOOM : Oui. J'espère plus français reporters et éditeurs littéraires me contacter by email à Danbloom@gmail.com et entrer en contact avec moi au sujet de mon cli-fi des idées. Bien que je porte un USA passeport, à de nombreux égards ma vie intellectuelle était formé en France et influencé par la France, et à bien des égards, cli fi sort de cette connexion J'ai avec la France. Peut-etre les reporters devrait me demander plus de détails à ce sujet? C'est une histoire intéressante.​ An American "dreamer" who has had a close relationship with France and French culture --and especially French literature -- all his adult life!

http://www.lemonde.fr/livres/article/2015/04/28/ecofictions-comme-s-il-en-pleuvait_4624591_3260.html

Saturday, May 2, 2015

Monday, March 9, 2015

The Cli-Fi Cafe (a global coffee shop where snippets of conversation resonate worldwide)


UPDATE MARCH 11: IPS [Inter Press Service], an international news service, runs this oped on "Cli-Fi and academia make a good mix as college classrooms go cli-fi" - LINK to IPS site: LEDE: ''From Columbia University in New York to the University of Cambridge in Britain, college classrooms are picking up on the “cli-fi” genre of fiction, and cinema and academia is right behind them......While authors are penning cli-fi novels — with movie scriptwriters creating cli-fi screenplays to try to sell to Hollywood — classrooms worldwide are now focusing attention of the rising genre of literature and cinema.''

http://www.ipsnews.net/2015/03/cli-fi-reaches-into-literature-classrooms-worldwide/



 

Welcome to the The Cli-Fi Cafe. Have a seat, the waitstaff will be with your shortly. Meanwhile, this (below, see MENU) is what we have been overhearding lately. And if you have overheard some good things about cli-fi, drop us a line or leave a tip in the comments below. The waitstaff will be happy to receive them.

MENU

1. FAIR DINKUM: ''Can Cli-Fi save us from ourselves? With the grim prospects of climate change, a new genre of narratives can address our cultural anxiety, attitudes and provide comfort for future generations.''






 


 

Over heard at the table near the window overlooking the Pacific Ocean: debut Australian novelist -- ''ANCHOR POINT'' -- ALICE ROBINSON's very good Op-Ed on genre and its relationship to the Australian landmass and history

http://bloomsinthenews.blogspot.tw/2015/02/an-interview-with-australian-cli-fi.html

2. THE ONLY AND ONLY: "We're seeing more cli-fi themes in popular entertainment because they give substance to an ominous uncertainty that affects every one of us. And because, month by month, the recognition that we’re in real trouble is more and more widespread. In ''POLLY'' I’ve presented the radically altered climate along the (future) East Coast as a set of given features of the terrain that Polly must navigate. There’s some narrative irony in the fact that Polly and Leon give little thought to the tragically ruined landscape. Its traits are just dismal aspects of the only world they’ve ever known. So the shock caused by a long-deteriorating climate arises only in the reader, not in the characters." [Overheard at Don Bredes' table near the door.] RE:

Polly and the One and Only World -- a YA cli fi novel by Don Bredes]

 

3. NEXT CAB OFF THE RANK: ''Australian author James Bradley [in his new cli-fi novel ''Clade''] has found a way to balance the bigger picture with the pattern of human life and love, which continues in all its forms despite the imperceptible yet inexorable change happening all around.'' [Overheard at a table near the kitchen.]

4. CHARLIE FROST:  "If you ask me, Cli-Fi is not yet popular. The first time I heard about a work of cli-fi was the movie 2012. This movie goes through the events of an average American family who wants to survive with the wealthiest and most influential people in the world. The character Charlie Frost played by Woody Harrelson is a theorist who has been predicting all the disasters happening in the movie for years, but no one listened to him. This is like the cli-fi writers and movie directors right now. They are foreseeing the potential danger to our planet. Nobody believed Charlie Frost in 2012 because everyone though he sounded crazy and unstable. Everyone believed that these catastrophes couldn’t actually happen, and I think that is what people think of cli-fi books and movies.'' [A long conversation overheard at Table 4.]

5. MAKING A DIFFERENCE: ''I agree with you that Cli-Fi is not a very popular genre as of now. I did not even realize that it was an official genre until I started taking a class on cli fi at my university. I think that it is going to take a couple years and some really big works to come out for it to start making a big difference. I think that we might be able to get to the point where cli-fi is more effective in a few years. Hopefully.'' [Overheard adjacent to Table 4]

6. ALICE ROBINSON, DROPPING BY FROM AUSTRALIA: -  ''Writing and publishing, as well as other cultural records, like film, afford us the opportunity to send a message through the years. Even if cli-fi can’t save us from ourselves, there is a measure of comfort in the notion that future generations will read the texts we are producing now. My hope is that, in doing so, they will come to understand that the perilous realities they are grappling with were already troubling to us. A tragedy we could imagine, if not avoid, long before it came to pass.''

7. ALICE, also told us: ''It is unlikely that cli-fi alone can temper the significant impacts of climate change on our already compromised lands. But it does furnish me with some cautious comfort to consider that the novels and stories we write now, depicting imagined climatically altered futures, might help prepare us, at least emotionally if not literally, for what comes next.''

8. COLLEGE STUDENT AT TABLE 8: ''I also agree that cli-fi is not a very popular genre yet, and in fact of my friends at college have never heard of it, until I told them I am taking a class on cli fi, but I think it can grow. We have seen the changes it has made in the film industry especially. That does carry some weight, though most of climate fiction seems to be in copy form. I hope that people will start to realize how big of a deal this is and change their way of life.''

9/ BROOKE STEWART, visiting from Oregon:  ''I totally agree that Cli-Fi is not yet popular. I asked two of my closest friends and one of the questions I asked was, “Have you ever experienced Cli-Fi in a book or story?” Both said “no” and said that they hadn’t even hear of Cli-Fi until I told them about it. I think that Cli-Fi is a great tool that we could use to educate people about global warming and it’s consequences, however, we need to make it known to the public that it exists first.''

10. THE CONVERSATION CONTINUES: 
''While I agree that cli-fi is not an uncommon genre, I believe that this is because our society is currently focused on a future apocalyptic culture. It’s almost as if society has lost hope in all future scenarios. The only positive futuristic movie that I can think of is “Back to the Future,” which is ironic because the second installment of the series is set in 2015. The focus of being in the future is all of the technology advancements that have been made, namely hover crafts, futuristic wardrobes, etc. There isn’t much of a negative connotation with the future.
Whereas when I think about movies today that are set in the future, “2012,” “I Am Legend,” “Avatar,” there is always a negative conflict with how society has developed. Whether it be that there is some sort of disease that spreads, as in “I Am Legend,” or that we have to practically create an entire new world, as in “Avatar,” there’s always a blame on humanity for doing something wrong.
So, even though I believe that cli-fi is not prevalent in today’s movies and literature, I think that it is definitely an issue that is indirectly brought to the table for discussion through the topic of an apocalyptic future.''


11. ''1984'' hits 2015 -- Counter table, people gasping as someone gushes:
 "If you live in Florida, you won't hear the words "climate change," "global warming," or "sea level rise," at least from the state's Department of Environmental Protection.'' via Reuters News report.

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Cli-Fi – A new way to talk about climate change in literary terms


''Cli-Fi'' – A new way to talk about climate change


I've flown overseas to interview an elfin little man named 
Danny Bloom, the transnational climate activist who, probably
more than anyone else on the planet, has done so much
to popularize and promote the the new literary term known
as cli-fi. Yes, that guy, and yes, that term.

We're sitting in a leafy park on a hot summer day, and Bloom
who coined the term in 2011 whilst he was doing some PR
work for a sci-fi writer named Jim Laughter in Tulsa, 
Oklahoma and his new SF thriller novel titled "Polar City Red.''

Bloom had commissioned the book the previous year, after 
putting out some online advertisements asking
for experienced novelists who might want to tackle writing
a speculative fiction novel about so-called "polar cities" housing
survivors of global warming impact events in the distant
future. Laughter got the gig, and he wrote the book as
quick as he could. It came out on Earth Day 2012, published
by a Texas imprint that Laughter had worked with
before. Polar cities, you ask? Read the book, or for now,
Google it at its Amazon site or on Laugher's own website.

He's in the Google book. See www.google.com
and www.amazon.com

So I ask Danny just how came to be doing PR for
a sci-fi writer in Tulsa.

"I was looking for someone to wrote a dystopian sci-fi novel
about survivors of global warming impact events in
some distant, way distant, future, like around 500 years from
now," he said. "The person I found online was Jim Laughter,
and after I outlined my commission request, he took a day 
to think it over and immediately said he would write it. The
deal was that I would title the novel as "Polar City Red" but 
that the entire plot and cast of chararacters would be his
to write and work out. Also, all payments and royalties for
the novel would go to Jim. All I wanted to hold in my hand
at some point was his novel.''

"When the time came to promote the book, I decided to
call it a cli-fi thriller, cli-fi standing for climate fiction, of 
course, like the way sci-fi stands for science fiction,"
Bloom, now in his early 70, told me. "I sent out a bunch of 
online press releases to newspapers and websites
worldwide, using the cli-fi term for the first time. Nobody 
replied to me, and nothing happened at first. But then I
sent a short note to novelist Margaret Atwood in Canada via 
Twitter and she kindly retweeted my tweet about "a new cli-fi thriller 
titled 'Polar City Red' by Jim Laugher."

Atwood at that time, 2011, had 600,000 Twitter followers. Now she 
has almost 2 million followers. So while Bloom's press
release went nowhere, Atwood's brief tweet about a cli-fi thriller
that nobody had ever heard of before got picked up by
media worldwide. Some outlets even credited Atwood with
coining the term, and one newspaper in Ireland said it was 
her coinage.

I asked Danny how he felt about Atwood getting the credit
for coining cli-fi in the Irish Times and he said he loved it.

"Doesn't matter who coined it or when or how, the main thing
is the term got out there, and it made literary history," he said.
"I can't thank Dr Atwood enough for her help with this."

Bloom also published a series of opeds about Laughter's cli-fi 
thriller and placed them in newspaper and blogs and websites
worldwide, as part of his PR campaign for the novel.

"Lo and behold, the term caught on," Bloom says, as if he
still can't believe it. "An important climate blogger at Emory 
University, Judith Curry, picked up the term in a popular
blog she titled "Cli-Fi" with over 300 comments coming in
to her. Then in April 2013, a year after Jim's little paperback
came out, NPR radio did a viral post headlined "It's so hot 
now, there's even a new literary genre for these novels: cli-fi."

The NPR reporter, Angela Evancie, put cli-fi on the national literary
map that day. And her post was followed in the next few weeks 
with stories about cli-fi in the UK Guardian, The Christian Science 
Monitor, The Financial Times, The New York Times and the BBC, 
Bloom says.

"It was in the air," he notes. "The time was just perfect
for cli-fi to catch on and it did."







Wednesday, February 20, 2008

2015 blog post - "Cli-fi' helps us face climate reality



HOUSE OF THE FUTURE?

An illustration released by the Polar Cities Research Project shows an artist's conception of a futuristic polar city in the year 2500 which could house survivors of global warming. The structure shown here was designed by Deng Cheng-hong of Taiwan in collaboration with Dan Bloom, director of the project. The British scientist James Lovelock, who has seen the images Deng created, told Bloom in an email: "It may very well happen and soon."

Illustration CREDIT: [Internet screen grab]
Deng Cheng-hong

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"Cli-fi' helps us face climate reality

By Dan Bloom
Guest Blog
May 15, 2015
 
A new genre, born from novels and movies about climate change, has surfaced. "Cli-fi," short for "climate-change fiction,” are novels and movies set
in the present or the near future that put the true story of climate change in fictional settings and scenarios. They help us better understand our climate not with scientific statistics nor government charts but by engendering raw emotions with stories that are relatable.
 
I coined the cli-fi term to serve as a platform for writers and film directors who create art about the biggest existential threat humankind has ever faced. We need novels and movies that go beyond abstract predictions and statistics to show the moment-by-moment reality of a possibly painful future, and the tragic price we may have to pay for our passionate devotion to all the wrong things. Art can make a difference. And in the fight to stop climate change before it gets out of hand, art can help change attitudes.
 
Novels such as Barbara Kingsolver’s “Flight Behavior” and Nathaniel Rich’s “Odds Against Tomorrow” are shouts from the rooftop. Kingsolver explores the impact that global climate change has on one small rural community; Rich sets his book in a future immersed in ecological disaster and focuses on what worst-case scenarios might look like. Both are about people wrestling with forces larger than themselves.
 
Cli-fi movies have roots in the 1970s. Two good ones are often mentioned as precursors to the cli-fi genre: “Silent Running,” made in 1972, is an environmentally-themed film set in a future in which plant life has become extinct; “Soylent Green” (1973), starring Charlton Heston, features a dystopian future world suffering from greenhouse effects. More recently, films such as “The Day After Tomorrow” (2004) and the upcoming climate dramedy “Chloe and Theo” (2015) impact us in the place where emotions and intellect meet. “The Day After Tomorrow” depicts a scientist’s journey to find his son while catastrophic weather events propel the Earth into an Ice Age. “Chloe and Theo” tells a story about an Inuit who leave his tiny Arctic village and travels to New York with an important message for world leaders: My world is melting. Help.

At a recent screening of the cli-fi comedy "Chloe and Theo" at a World Bank function in Washington, Marty Katz, the president of Prospero Pictures, participated in a panel discussion about the power of cinema to connect with people over serious issues.

“Can film be an agent for social change? Can the arts be an agent for social change? Katz asked. “Can anything but the arts be an agent for social change? I can’t think of how to change people’s perception or behavior except for the arts. That’s why governments who don’t want people’s behavior to be changed censor the arts.

“I think that film can be a catalyst for those who can be social agents who can affect change in the world and I think that’s a great thing,” he added.
Later, Katz tweeted a 140-character quote, on his Twitter feed: You need the big story that comes from films. Then you need to give tools to people to make them able to make a change. #TakeOn — @Connect4Climate
While climate change can be a scary and overwhelmingly difficult topic that people want to avoid, as Manjana Milkoreit at Arizona State University has said, storytelling in movies like ''Chloe and Theo'' can bring the harsh realities of climate change home to world audiences, and world leaders.
I’m pleased Cli-fi is catching on, with media coverage in the New York Times, the Guardian, and the Sydney Morning Herald. Cli-fi is a global meme. Why are we seeing a rise of interest in the cli-fi genre? It's in the air. With all the daily news stories and TV programs about climate issues and sea level rise and coastal flooding in the future, we’ve shifted from stories about sci-fi to cli-fi.
 
It's been a big challenge for me, but an inspiring and meaningful one, to try to use science issues mixed with art to try to issue a wake-up call about global warming with a new genre term. And the feedback I have received from people in many countries—Brazil, India, Mexico, Germany, Denmark, France—tell me that the messages are resonating.
 
I believe humankind is facing the most critical threat to our continued existence as a species ever. By nature, I’m a worrier. But I wake up every day full of hope and optimism, believing cli-fi can play an important role as a warning flare. Cli-fi novels and movies are not just for entertainment or weekend escapes in packed multiplexes, but also for serious thinking and planning. If we care about future generations—and I do, deeply—we must confront these issues now, and art has the power to wake people up.
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Dan Bloom is the editor of The Cli-Fi Report at cli-fi.net and blogs about climate issues and the arts at pcillu101.blogspot.com

Nominations for the 2015 annual awards program, The Cli-Fi Movies Awards, or "The Cliffies" are now being accepted at email: danbloom @ gmail.com.
To see last year's winners and the categories, go to http://korgw101.blogspot.com.