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Italian Science Fiction and the Environmental Humanities [Hardback]

  • Formāts: Hardback, 296 pages, height x width: 239x163 mm, 9 Illustrations
  • Sērija : Liverpool Science Fiction Texts & Studies 80
  • Izdošanas datums: 12-Dec-2023
  • Izdevniecība: Liverpool University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1802078703
  • ISBN-13: 9781802078701
  • Hardback
  • Cena: 87,23 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 296 pages, height x width: 239x163 mm, 9 Illustrations
  • Sērija : Liverpool Science Fiction Texts & Studies 80
  • Izdošanas datums: 12-Dec-2023
  • Izdevniecība: Liverpool University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1802078703
  • ISBN-13: 9781802078701
This volume explores Italian science fiction from the nineteenth century to the twenty-first, covering literary texts, films, music and visual works by figures as diverse as Maria Rosa Cutrufelli, Peter Kolosimo, Primo Levi, Antonio Margheriti, Gilda Musa and Roberto Vacca. It broadens the horizons of both Italian studies and the environmental humanities by addressing a long-neglected genre, and expands our understanding of relations between the ecological, the imaginary and the sociopolitical. The chapters draw on a variety of methodological frameworks, including animal studies, ecocriticism, ecofeminism, eco-media studies, energy humanities and posthumanism. The reader will gain insights into consequential topics such as anthropocentrism/speciesism, ecomodernist thought, environmental justice struggles at the planetary and regional level, non-human and new materialist ontologies, utopian/dystopian philosophies and prospects for transitioning beyond the crisis of petro-modernity
through the construction of post-depletion futures.

Open Access versions of the volume editors' introduction to the book, Marco Malvestio's chapter 'Spaceships in the Anthropocene: Peter Kolosimo and the End of (Our) Times', Matteo Gilebbi's chapter 'Uncanny Spaces in Inhuman Times: The Art of Giacomo Costa', Raffaella Baccolini and Chiara Xausa's chapter 'Ecofeminist Care at the End of the World: Collaborative Survival in Niccolo Ammaniti's Anna and Maria Rosa Cutrufelli's L'isola delle Madri', Daniel Finch-Race's chapter 'Industrial Workers and Pitfalls in Emile Souvestre's Le Monde tel qu'il sera en l'an 3000 (1846) and Agostino della Sala Spada's Nel 2073! (1874)' and Arielle Saiber's interview with Francesco Verso will be made available on publication.

Recenzijas

This collection of essays takes the reader to the uncanny territory of Italian science fiction, a world animated by apocalyptic fantasies and ecological dystopias, consumerist annihilations and nonhuman socialities. In an epoch of multiple planetary crises, this revelatory book is a must-read for any archaeologist of the present. Federico Luisetti, University of St. Gallen If Italian culture has an ecological unconscious, that unconscious is embodied in science fiction. Rarely do so many creative motifs converge in the imagination of our species and the planet within a single literary genre: there are the anxieties of the automaton as an other-than-human, encounters with our spatio-temporal otherness, technological apocalypses, dilemmas of hybridity with real and imaginary life forms, and the desires of new socio-energetic utopias. With a perspective that encompasses cinema, art, and literature, ranging from great classics like Buzzati, Levi, Calvino, and Scerbanenco to alien archaeologies and solarpunk, Italian Science Fiction and the Environmental Humanities retrieves this unconscious and inaugurates the entrance of Italian science fiction into the international eco-literary canon. A futuristic and pioneering book that rightfully joins the essential references of environmental humanities studies. Serenella Iovino, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Introduction: Greening Italian Science Fiction New Approaches to a
Long-Lasting Genre

Daniel A. Finch-Race, Emiliano Guaraldo, Marco Malvestio

Section I: Science in the Anthropocene

Herbert Paganis Mégalopolis: A Rock Opera between Dystopian Science Fiction
and Ecological Utopia

Eleonora Lima

Cultural and Ecological Extinction in Primo Levis Science-Fiction

Michele Maiolani

What Kind of Science? Italian Science Fiction Writers against the Economic
Boom

Daniele Comberiati

Section II: Visions of Extinction

Ecofeminist Care at the End of the World: Collaborative Survival in Niccolņ
Ammanitis Anna and Maria Rosa Cutrufellis Lisola delle Madri

Raffaella Baccolini and Chiara Xausa

Barbarism, Animalization, and the End of the World: Fantasies of Regression
and Mutation in Italian Science Fiction

Simona Micali

A Post-Apocalyptic Garden of Eden. Marco Ferreris Il Seme dellUomo

Emiliano Guaraldo

Section III: Urban Landscapes and Industrial Capitalism in a Rapidly
Changing Country

Industrial Wonders and Pitfalls in Émile Souvestres Le Monde tel quil sera
en lan 3000 (1846) and Agostino della Sala Spadas Nel 2073! (1874)

Daniel A. Finch-Race

Spaceships in the Anthropocene: Peter Kolosimo and the End of (Our) Times

Marco Malvestio

Uncanny Spaces in Inhuman Times: The Art of Giacomo Costa

Matteo Gilebbi

Against Eco-Fascism: Space and Place in Tullio Avoledos Furland

Florian Mussgnug

Section IV: Posthuman, More-than-Human, and Interspecies Relations

Green Traces: Vegetal Imagination in Italian Science Fiction from Gilda Musa
to Solarpunk

Enrico Cesaretti

Bonsai Children, Enchanted Gardens: Nature as Artifice in Paolo Zanottis
Dystopian Fairy Tale

Valentina Fulginiti

All We Need is Love?: Eros, Agape, and Koinonia in the Time of Mass
Extinction

Danila Cannamela

Eco-Horror: Human-Animal Encounters in Italian Science-Fiction Films

Robert A. Rushing

Solarpunk, or rather Solartivismo: An Interview with Francesco Verso

Arielle Saiber
Daniel A. Finch-Race is an Assistant Professor in Geography in the Department of History and Cultures at the University of Bologna. Emiliano Guaraldo is a Postdoctoral Fellow in Geography at the New Institute Centre for Environmental Humanities, Ca Foscari University, Venice. Marco Malvestio is a Marie Skodowska-Curie Postdoctoral Fellow in Comparative Literature in the Department of Linguistic and Literary Studies at the University of Padua.