This essay counterpoints two existential threats in our lifetimes—nuclear apocalypse and climate catastrophe—comparing how they have been recorded in historical documents and how they have registered in the American imagination. It surveys non-fiction and fiction, including a few films, to uncover persistent patterns of American denial that may lead—in fact, scientists increasingly believe will lead—to climate apocalypse. Strong historical and thematic similarities exist until, surprisingly and even shockingly, they diverge at their imagined endpoints. My essay turns to examples from the United States’ history as a nuclear power. These include governmental suppression of information after the bombing of Hiroshima, willful distortions of how...
Climate change does not loom over America in 2020: we are already inside of it. As the twenty-first ...
Risk Criticism is a study of literary and cultural responses to global environmental risk in an age ...
This project argues that the nuclear bomb has made speculation an integral part of representing the ...
This dissertation looks at global nuclear war as a trope that can be traced throughout twentieth cen...
Since the first atomic explosion in 1945 the United States has dedicated more economic, human, and e...
This essay explores our nuclear entanglement through culture and the environment. It does so through...
This essay explores a narrative device familiar from sci-fi and dystopian fiction that is commonly u...
What happens when scientists use fiction to envision our future in a world radically altered by clim...
The essay addresses the problem of the relation of literary knowledge to environmental knowledge, ex...
Climate change is problematic to the imagination; it is highly complex, vast and possesses character...
In our current unstable world, nuclear warfare, climate crises, and techno nihilism are three perilo...
The essay intends to demonstrate how three recent works of non-fiction authored by Western journalis...
In 1974, the board of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists created the Doomsday clock, using the im...
In my dissertation “Atomic Apocalypse – ‘Nuclear Fiction’ in German Literature and Culture,” I inves...
Modern disaster films constitute a specific cultural form that speaks to the anxieties of the “risk ...
Climate change does not loom over America in 2020: we are already inside of it. As the twenty-first ...
Risk Criticism is a study of literary and cultural responses to global environmental risk in an age ...
This project argues that the nuclear bomb has made speculation an integral part of representing the ...
This dissertation looks at global nuclear war as a trope that can be traced throughout twentieth cen...
Since the first atomic explosion in 1945 the United States has dedicated more economic, human, and e...
This essay explores our nuclear entanglement through culture and the environment. It does so through...
This essay explores a narrative device familiar from sci-fi and dystopian fiction that is commonly u...
What happens when scientists use fiction to envision our future in a world radically altered by clim...
The essay addresses the problem of the relation of literary knowledge to environmental knowledge, ex...
Climate change is problematic to the imagination; it is highly complex, vast and possesses character...
In our current unstable world, nuclear warfare, climate crises, and techno nihilism are three perilo...
The essay intends to demonstrate how three recent works of non-fiction authored by Western journalis...
In 1974, the board of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists created the Doomsday clock, using the im...
In my dissertation “Atomic Apocalypse – ‘Nuclear Fiction’ in German Literature and Culture,” I inves...
Modern disaster films constitute a specific cultural form that speaks to the anxieties of the “risk ...
Climate change does not loom over America in 2020: we are already inside of it. As the twenty-first ...
Risk Criticism is a study of literary and cultural responses to global environmental risk in an age ...
This project argues that the nuclear bomb has made speculation an integral part of representing the ...