Privatized Futures, Climate Control, and Resistance in Recent Scottish Dystopian Fiction

This article addresses Scottish dystopian novels that move past ideas of the British state as Big Brother to envision future Scotlands encountering global problems of climate change and its exploitation by neoliberal regimes. After discussing Alasdair Gray’s 1982, Janine (1984) as an influential con...

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Main Author: Peter Clandfield
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centre de Recherche "Texte et Critique de Texte" 2022-11-01
Series:Sillages Critiques
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Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/12939
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author Peter Clandfield
author_facet Peter Clandfield
author_sort Peter Clandfield
collection DOAJ
description This article addresses Scottish dystopian novels that move past ideas of the British state as Big Brother to envision future Scotlands encountering global problems of climate change and its exploitation by neoliberal regimes. After discussing Alasdair Gray’s 1982, Janine (1984) as an influential confrontation with the increasingly toxic military-industrial state of 1980s Britain, the essay interprets Matthew Fitt’s But n Ben A-Go-Go (2000), John Aberdein’s Strip the Willow (2009), and the multiple-author graphic novel IDP: 2043 (2014), edited by Denise Mina, as what Umberto Eco calls “novels of anticipation,” or warnings of the undesirable eventualities that present tendencies may bring about. The essay shows how these novels also anticipate recent critical perspectives on climate change and dystopia, particularly Amitav Ghosh’s call (2016) for fiction that confronts the potentially intractable effects of global weather events, and Tom Moylan’s advocacy (2020) of works that resist presenting dystopian spectacles for passive consumption and instead call upon readers for active, constructive interpretation.
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language English
publishDate 2022-11-01
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spelling doaj-art-fe7cba84e0b9435b99df15b4c44635612025-01-30T13:47:14ZengCentre de Recherche "Texte et Critique de Texte"Sillages Critiques1272-38191969-63022022-11-013210.4000/sillagescritiques.12939Privatized Futures, Climate Control, and Resistance in Recent Scottish Dystopian FictionPeter ClandfieldThis article addresses Scottish dystopian novels that move past ideas of the British state as Big Brother to envision future Scotlands encountering global problems of climate change and its exploitation by neoliberal regimes. After discussing Alasdair Gray’s 1982, Janine (1984) as an influential confrontation with the increasingly toxic military-industrial state of 1980s Britain, the essay interprets Matthew Fitt’s But n Ben A-Go-Go (2000), John Aberdein’s Strip the Willow (2009), and the multiple-author graphic novel IDP: 2043 (2014), edited by Denise Mina, as what Umberto Eco calls “novels of anticipation,” or warnings of the undesirable eventualities that present tendencies may bring about. The essay shows how these novels also anticipate recent critical perspectives on climate change and dystopia, particularly Amitav Ghosh’s call (2016) for fiction that confronts the potentially intractable effects of global weather events, and Tom Moylan’s advocacy (2020) of works that resist presenting dystopian spectacles for passive consumption and instead call upon readers for active, constructive interpretation.https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/12939neoliberalismgraphic novelclimate changeScottish literatureGhosh (Amitav)Debord (Guy)
spellingShingle Peter Clandfield
Privatized Futures, Climate Control, and Resistance in Recent Scottish Dystopian Fiction
Sillages Critiques
neoliberalism
graphic novel
climate change
Scottish literature
Ghosh (Amitav)
Debord (Guy)
title Privatized Futures, Climate Control, and Resistance in Recent Scottish Dystopian Fiction
title_full Privatized Futures, Climate Control, and Resistance in Recent Scottish Dystopian Fiction
title_fullStr Privatized Futures, Climate Control, and Resistance in Recent Scottish Dystopian Fiction
title_full_unstemmed Privatized Futures, Climate Control, and Resistance in Recent Scottish Dystopian Fiction
title_short Privatized Futures, Climate Control, and Resistance in Recent Scottish Dystopian Fiction
title_sort privatized futures climate control and resistance in recent scottish dystopian fiction
topic neoliberalism
graphic novel
climate change
Scottish literature
Ghosh (Amitav)
Debord (Guy)
url https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/12939
work_keys_str_mv AT peterclandfield privatizedfuturesclimatecontrolandresistanceinrecentscottishdystopianfiction