石油和卡路里:保罗·巴西加卢皮的《破船者》和《卡路里人》中的能量范式

IF 0.3 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Karl Kristian Swane Bambini
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引用次数: 2

摘要

本文将能量视角应用于Paolo Bacigalupi的《破船者》(2010)和《卡路里人》(2005),以马克思的当代环境解读为基础,探索他们与自然之间不可持续的代谢关系。本文将这些文本视为批判的反乌托邦,描绘了巴西加卢皮在其未来的后石油社会中所采用的反乌托邦和乌托邦的推断,特别是与晚期能源运输和能源相关商品的基础设施有关的推断。虽然Bacigalupi在这些文本中使用了面向生态的基因和工业技术,但他的工作强调,仅靠技术解决方案无法治愈我们不可持续的自然新陈代谢。Bacigalupi通过在认知上孤立动物和人类的劳动、生态船和转基因作物,同时强调资本主义晚期对人和环境的剥削,进入了关于人类世和大加速的文化辩论。这篇文章还探讨了由此产生的代谢裂痕,这些裂痕在两篇文章中都很明显,特别引起了人们对自然不稳定的方面的关注,这些方面避开了资本主义的控制,也给生产和利润带来了麻烦,包括棋盘等转基因生物,以及风暴和全球变暖导致的海平面上升等更多的“自然”因素。这篇文章最终试图证明,《破船者》和《卡路里人》动员了一个反乌托邦的框架,以强调资本主义下能源生产的不平衡代谢,将读者推向一个更现实的社会变革,而不是技术变革。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Oil and Calories: Energy Paradigms in Paolo Bacigalupi’s Ship Breaker and ‘The Calorie Man’
This article applies an energy lens to Paolo Bacigalupi’s Ship Breaker (2010) and ‘The Calorie Man’ (2005), relying on contemporary environmental readings of Marx to explore their unsustainable metabolic relationship with nature. Situating these texts as critical dystopias, this article maps the dystopian and utopian extrapolations Bacigalupi deploys in his future post-oil society, specifically relating to the infrastructure of late energy transport and energy-related commodities. While Bacigalupi utilises ecologically-oriented genetic and industrial technologies in these texts, his work emphasises that technological solutions alone will not be able to heal our unsustainable metabolism of nature. Bacigalupi enters into cultural debates on the Anthropocene and the Great Acceleration by cognitively estranging animal and human labour, ecological ships, and genetically modified crops, while simultaneously highlighting the exploitation of both people and the environment in late capitalism. This article also explores the resultant metabolic rifts evident in both texts, drawing specific attention to the destabilised aspects of nature that elude capitalistic control and trouble spaces of production and profit, including genetically modified creatures like cheshires, and more ‘natural’ elements like storms and sea-level rise due to global warming. The article ultimately seeks to prove that Ship Breaker and ‘The Calorie Man’ mobilise a dystopian framework to highlight the imbalanced metabolism of energy production under capitalism, moving the reader towards a more realisable social, as opposed to technological, change.
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来源期刊
Open Library of Humanities
Open Library of Humanities HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
20.00%
发文量
24
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊介绍: The Open Library of Humanities is a peer-reviewed, open-access journal open to submissions from researchers working in any humanities'' discipline in any language. The journal is funded by an international library consortium and has no charges to authors or readers. The Open Library of Humanities is digitally preserved in the CLOCKSS archive.
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