tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-949421001644904537.post2475514710984688408..comments2024-01-24T18:56:58.635-08:00Comments on EXPLORING CULTURES: A Global Blog (all languages): QUOTE UNQUOTE: A continuing series comments and quips that some of our friends and colleagues around the world are saying about ''cli-fi...''Unknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-949421001644904537.post-90227032775714127712017-01-27T19:21:16.581-08:002017-01-27T19:21:16.581-08:00SAID ONE NAYSAYER IN THE UK on his Facebook page i...SAID ONE NAYSAYER IN THE UK on his Facebook page in early 2017: quote unquote:<br /><br />''People it is acceptable to punch: <br /><br />1 Narzis <br /><br />2 people who use the term grip-lit <br /><br />3 Narzis <br /><br />4 people who use the term cli-fi <br /><br />5 Narzis''<br /><br />DANIELBLOOMhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05130493903696077379noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-949421001644904537.post-81224455040659893572016-08-13T20:36:53.901-07:002016-08-13T20:36:53.901-07:00The romanticization of the materially poor as envi...The romanticization of the materially poor as environmentally ethical appears most often in travel writing, but is visible in work from Dances with Wolves to the distinction drawn between the Emishi villagers and the citizens of Irontown in Princess Mononoke. In communities without access to capital, people do consume less and pollute less, but their poverty is nonconsensual, unsustainable, and immoral. It leaves them no recourse but to strive for the same economy of mass consumption modelled by the global North.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com