Authors: Gerry Canavan
Gloss, Molly,
254
Glotfelty, Cheryll,
41
Gore, Al,
8
Gorz, André,
75n40
government: allegory of Apartheid in
District 9
,
153
,
157n20
; apocalyptic government in
The Sea and Summer
,
124
; population control in Spaceship Beagle,
99
,
105
â
6
,
108
â
9
; satirical government in
The Telling
,
67
; social welfare programs,
18
,
109
â
10
; totalitarianism in
1984
,
3
; Wicca government in
The Ice People
,
137
â
38
Grainville, Cousin de,
48
Greener Than You Think
(Ward Moore): optimism-pessimism dialectic in,
17
; plot overview,
49
â
50
; publication of,
42
; satiric-ironic apocalypse in,
49
Guattari, Félix,
217
Hall, Joseph,
115
Hansen, James,
192
Harbach, Chad,
9
Hardin, Garrett: on capitalist economics,
103
â
4
,
109
; on the commons resource system,
106
,
109
; on lifeboat ethics,
18
,
103
,
109
â
11
; Spaceship Beagle account,
102
â
5
,
108
,
110
â
11
. Works:
Exploring New Ethics for Survival: The Voyage of the Spaceship Beagle
,
102
â
11
; “The Tragedy of the Commons,”
106
Harman, Graham,
214
Harrison, Harry,
40
Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich,
210
â
11
Heglin, Peter,
115
Heidegger, Martin,
206
â
7
,
214
,
217
â
19
,
222
Heinlein, Robert: alien invasion narratives,
78
; on the categories of SF,
12
â
13
; ecological limits in,
7
. Works:
The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress
,
7
,
81
;
The Puppet Masters
,
78
â
79
;
Sixth Column
,
78
Helmreich, Stefan,
238
Hendershot, Cyndy,
79
Herbert, Frank: ecological extrapolation in,
87
; on environmental SF,
40
; influence on Kim Stanley Robinson,
253
. Works:
Dune
,
41
,
87
,
253
;
The Wounded Planet
,
40
history.
See
time and temporality
Horowitz, David,
82
Huber, François,
28
Hudson, W. H.,
43
human beings: Anthropocene,
x
,
4
â
5
,
16
; computer representations of consciousness,
254
; ecology as critique of anthropocentrism,
57
; gendered nonhuman agency,
142n27
;
Homo contracipiens
in Hardin,
105
â
7
; human-animal analogy in H. G. Wells,
27
â
28
,
36
â
37
; human-centeredness in Le Guin,
90
; human characterization in SF,
144
; human chauvinism in Golden Age SF,
78
; human exceptionalism,
26
â
29
,
52
,
214
â
15
; human-nonhuman connection in Bacigalupi,
180
; human simulacra/phantoms in
Solaris
,
228
â
30
; hybrids/cyborgs as other,
149
â
50
; immortality in
Bacigalupi's “Pop Squad,”
186
â
87
; mass extinction in
Men Like Gods
,
17
,
32
â
35
,
37
; mass extinction in
The Genocides
,
85
â
86
; multispecies relations,
237
â
38
; nonhuman values and,
250
; ontological gaps in
Avatar
,
209
â
11
; originary “oceanic feeling” of,
233
,
238
â
39
,
240n20
.
See also
alien encounters
;
animals
;
posthuman Earths
;
transformation of humanity
Hume, David,
213
Husserl, Edmund,
215
Huxley, Julian,
31
Huxley, T. H.,
43
hydroponic agriculture,
45
imperialism: biological vulnerability to pathogens and,
83
; British postimperial narratives,
79
â
80
; Earth-centric colonization discourse,
254
; ecological imperialism,
82
â
83
,
86
â
91
; “first contact” narratives and,
77
; historical models for
Word for World is Forest
,
88
â
89
; human exceptionalism in
War of the Worlds
,
26
â
27
; post-imperial Other in
Avatar
,
13
,
19
,
206
; as root of ecological crisis,
91
; solar system as limit on,
248
â
49
; South African colonialism,
143
â
44
; surface/depth ocean study and,
227
individualism/libertarianism,
44
â
45
Invaders from Mars
,
79
Invasion U.S.A.
,
79
Jameson, Fredric: on allegorical realism,
198
â
99
; on imperialist fatalism in Ballard,
80
; on political ecology in Le Guin,
56
â
58
,
60
â
62
,
72
; on postmodernism,
4
,
168
; on the unimaginability of the future,
184
; on the “Unknowability Thesis” in
Solaris
,
228
,
230
; on Utopia,
14
,
60
â
61
,
116
Jasanoff, Sheila,
127
Jendrysik, Mark,
202
Joyce, James,
16
Kahiu, Wanuri,
12
Kant, Immanuel: defiant rationality in
Avatar
and,
221
â
24
; narratives of the future and,
193
; opening of the Anthropocene and,
206
,
210
â
11
; relationist ontology and,
219
; transcendence in
Avatar
and,
209
â
15
Kapp, K. William,
12
Kepler, Johannes,
251
Kirksey, S. Eben,
238
Knickerbocker, Dale,
182
Kolko, Gabriel,
82
Kunkel, Benjamin,
5
Lang, Fritz,
44
Lee, Richard B.,
x
Le Guin, Ursula K.: critique of ecological imperialism,
40
,
87
â
91
; Daoism in,
17
,
59
â
73
; ecological issues in,
40
; environmentalist movement and,
56
â
57
,
89
; influence on Kim Stanley Robinson,
253
; Marxist perspective on,
56
,
59
â
73
; ordinariness and anomaly in,
160
â
61
; political alienation in,
60
â
63
; Suvin affiliation with,
58
â
59
; on technology in SF,
144
; world reduction in,
61
,
62
â
73
; on yin utopianism,
62
â
68
,
72
. Works:
Always Coming Home
,
62
,
67
â
71
;
City of Illusions
,
59
,
68
,
253
;
The Dispossessed
,
56
,
59
,
61
,
67
â
69
;
The Lathe of Heaven
,
67
,
160
â
61
,
168
,
171
;
The Left Hand of Darkness
,
41
,
61
,
69
,
90
; “The New Atlantis,”
59
,
67
; “A Non-Euclidian View of California as a Cold Place to Be,”
63
;
Planet of Exile
,
59
;
Rocannon's World
,
59
; “Science Fiction and Mrs. Brown,”
144
;
The Telling
,
62
,
67
â
69
,
71
;
The Word for World is Forest
,
17
,
60
,
67
Lem, Stanislaw,
228
,
230
. See also
Solaris
Le Vailllant, François,
147
Levitas, Ruth,
188
Levy, Michael,
148
Lewis, C. S.,
37
Life after People
,
18
lifeboat ethics,
18
,
103
,
109
â
11
London (United Kingdom),
169
â
70
London, Jack,
51
Lubbock, John,
28
Luckhurst, Roger,
251
MacLeod, Ken,
254
Magdoff, Harry,
82
Man Who Awoke, The
(Laurence Manning): energy crisis in,
40
; evolution theme in,
42
â
43
,
52
; literary sources for,
43
; optimism-pessimism dialectic in,
17
; publication of,
42
Martians,
25
â
28
,
46
.
See also
alien encounters
Marx/Marxism: absence of the political in science faction,
202
; on Australia as economic frontier,
115
; critical theory,
199
; cyclical history in,
15
; deep ecology and,
256
; deflationary vs. inflationary critique in,
16
; Eastern religion and,
256
â
57
; financial crisis in
Sea and Summer
and,
122
â
24
; global surplus labor and,
205n29
; Le Guin ecological Daoism and,
56
â
73
; Martian radicalism in the
Mars
trilogy,
249
; social justice as survival technology,
259
; Spaceship Beagle steady-state society,
102
â
3
; vampire capitalism in
Daybreakers
,
13
.
See also
economy
mass extinction: “climate change” term and,
243
; Darwinian model for,
43
; ecology of extinction in Rachel Carson,
34
,
38n32
; ecopoesis in “Oceanic” and,
234
; in
The Genocides
,
85
â
86
; in
Men Like Gods
,
17
,
32
â
35
,
37
; Quiet Earth theme and,
11
; SF-reality dialectic and,
ix
â
x
,
11
,
193
,
244
; technology as means of avoidance,
35
,
243
; utopian reversal in
2312
,
250
; in
War of the Worlds
,
26
â
27
.
See also
Anthropocene
materialism (in
The Time Machine
),
2
McCaffrey, Andy,
146
McKay, Chris,
249
McNeill, J. R.,
91
McNeill, William,
83
Mendel, Gregor,
30
Mendlesohn, Farah,
53
Men Like Gods
(H. G. Wells),
17
,
25
,
32
â
34
,
37
Merril, Judith,
81
Miéville, China: ordinariness and anomaly in,
170
â
73
; on postapocalyptic endings,
159
. Works:
Kraken
,
18
,
159
,
169
â
74
;
Red Planets
,
ix
Milling, Jill,
48