Examining the challenges faced by novelists writing realist fiction in
the age of climate change, this open access book considers the various
ways in which contemporary writers have evolved new and transformed
modes of realism to grapple with the problems of living on an endangered
planet.
Focusing on fiction set in the 'long present' - a term used to cover the
actual present, the near future and an historic past that interacts with
the present - Thieme argues that long-present realism negates the
possibility of deferring engagement with the climate crisis on the
grounds that it is a future threat.
Thieme examines work by twelve novelists: Margaret Atwood, James
Bradley, Amitav Ghosh, Helon Habila, Liz Jensen, Barbara Kingsolver, Ian
McEwan, Richard Powers, Annie Proulx, Indra Sinha, Antii Tuomainen and
Wu Ming-Yi. He provides important new insights into the methods these
writers use to convey the urgency of the climate crisis and how their
work can inform our understandings of the Anthropocene activity that
endangers life on Earth.
The ebook editions of this book are available open access under a CC
BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on bloomsburycollections.com. Open access was
funded by Knowledge Unlatched.