- A recent well-attended SRO-only author's event in Chicago with Amitav Ghosh chatting on stage at the Harold Washington Public Library on October 18 about climate change issues, followed by a short question and answer period after the lively talk by the American-Indian climate essayist.
by staff writer and agencies
CHICAGO -- Amitav Ghosh, 60, spoke about his new book of essays, published by the University of Chicago Press, and based on four lectures he gave at the University in October 2015, one year ago.
However, nobody but nobody in the audience challenged Dr Ghosh on one of his major mistaken theses in the book, where he states that modern novelists have not been tackling climate change issues, when in fact, many of those in attendance know about the cli-fi movement worldwide and they know that Ghosh did not do his homework for that chapter of the book, because in fact, hundreds of Western novelists have been writing about climate change and natural disasters since the 1960s. But for some reason, Ghosh does not admit this in his book, nor did he do so in his Chicago lectures in 2015 were the basis for this book. Problem here. - But sadly, Dr Ghosh is proscriptive about what kinds of fiction Western novelists may deply to talk about these issues and they have been tacking AGW issues since the 1960s. Ghosh did not do his homework on how genre novels and genre writers HAVE BEEN tackcling climate change in their novels for 50 years. Maybe not in India and maybe not Ghosh, but hundreds in the West have and he fails miserably in his chapter on literature and climate change. Wake up, Dr Ghosh!
See Cli-Fi Report website to counter Ghosh's mistaken thesis that ''artists, novelists, musicians, and film makers, when it comes to imagining the possibilities of the Anthropocene, are not writing novels about it.
cli-fi.net
Josh T • 9 hours ago
Having read only this very interesting and well-done review and not Ghosh's essays themselves, I have three reactions:
1) The list of authors mentioned above is not exactly the literary C-team. To them I'd add Jonathan Franzen and Nathaniel Rich just off the top of my head. It's hard to argue the topic is marginal in literary fiction.
2) There's more than one way into this issue for a literary author. I have a novel manuscript that's about climate change (hey literary agents, give me a call) but it's about the human failure part rather than the global cataclysm part. Ghosh doesn't seem to make room for this.
3) If you want to fight climate change, fight climate change, don't write a novel. Literary novels, in my view, are about revealing truth, not telling people what to do. If the revealed truth spurs action, that's wonderful. But for an author to set out with that in mind seems like activism rather than art, and it's rarely successful at either.
Tuesday, October 18, 2016
A recent author's event in Chicago with Amitav Ghosh chatting on stage at the Harold Washington Public Library on October 18 about climate change issues and his new monograph THE GREAT DERANGEMENT
A recent author's event in Chicago with Amitav Ghosh chatting on stage at the Harold Washington Public Library on October 18 about climate change issues and his new monograph THE GREAT DERANGEMENT
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment