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'George Turner's story "The Fittest" evokes the
concept of "culling," a deliberate scientific attempt to reduce
the world's population' (Colin Steele, SF Commentary No 77 2001, p.52)
Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
yMortal Fire : Best Australian Science FictionMortal Fire : Best Australian SF; Terry Dowling and Van Ikin Present Mortal Fire : Best Australian SFTerry Dowling
(editor),
Van Ikin
(editor),
Rydalmere:Coronet,1993Z4914001993anthology short story science fiction Rydalmere:Coronet,1993
The Sea and Eternal Summer: Science Fiction, Futurology and Climate ChangeAndrew Milner,
2013single work — Appears in:
Australasian Journal of Ecocriticism and Cultural Ecology,
no.
32013;'This paper will be concerned to analyse what is almost certainly the earliest Australian climate change dystopia. In 1985 George Turner published a short story, The Fittest, in which he began to explore the fictional possibilities of the effects of global warming. He quickly expanded this story into a full-length novel published as The Sea and Summer in Britain and as Drowning Towers in the United States. The Sea and Summer is set mainly in Melbourne, a vividly described, particular place, terrifyingly transformed into the utterly unfamiliar. Turner’s core narrative describes a world of mass unemployment and social polarisation, in which rising sea levels have inundated the Bayside suburbs; the poor ‘Swill’ live in high-rise tower blocks, the lower floors of which are progressively submerged; the wealthier ‘Sweet’ in suburbia on higher ground. The paper will argue that Turner’s novel is long overdue a positive critical re-evaluation.' (Publication abstract)
Postcolonial Criticism, Ecocriticism and Climate Change : A Tale of Melbourne under Water in 2035Anne Maxwell,
2009single work criticism — Appears in:
Journal of Postcolonial Writing,Marchvol.
45no.
12009;(p. 15-26)The difficulty that postcolonial critics have found in opposing the recent, aggressive phase of capitalism known as 'globalization' has led to a crisis in relevancy in the discipline. Engaging with ecocritical discourses is one way to overcome this crisis. Some postcolonial poets and writers are already working in this way, and although historically ecocriticism has posed problems for postcolonial critics, the changes that ecocriticism has recently undergone mean that such concerns are fading. An area of study that is especially promising for postcolonial critics is analysing apocalyptic dystopias that speculate on the dire social and physical consequences of global warming. Taking a text by a leading Australian author as an example, this article argues that criticism that combines postcolonial and ecocritical concepts is able not only to expose late capitalism's crucial role in global warming but also to show readers that the political choices they make now will have lasting consequences for the lifestyles of coming generations. -- Author's abstract
Postcolonial Criticism, Ecocriticism and Climate Change : A Tale of Melbourne under Water in 2035Anne Maxwell,
2009single work criticism — Appears in:
Journal of Postcolonial Writing,Marchvol.
45no.
12009;(p. 15-26)The difficulty that postcolonial critics have found in opposing the recent, aggressive phase of capitalism known as 'globalization' has led to a crisis in relevancy in the discipline. Engaging with ecocritical discourses is one way to overcome this crisis. Some postcolonial poets and writers are already working in this way, and although historically ecocriticism has posed problems for postcolonial critics, the changes that ecocriticism has recently undergone mean that such concerns are fading. An area of study that is especially promising for postcolonial critics is analysing apocalyptic dystopias that speculate on the dire social and physical consequences of global warming. Taking a text by a leading Australian author as an example, this article argues that criticism that combines postcolonial and ecocritical concepts is able not only to expose late capitalism's crucial role in global warming but also to show readers that the political choices they make now will have lasting consequences for the lifestyles of coming generations. -- Author's abstract
The Sea and Eternal Summer: Science Fiction, Futurology and Climate ChangeAndrew Milner,
2013single work — Appears in:
Australasian Journal of Ecocriticism and Cultural Ecology,
no.
32013;'This paper will be concerned to analyse what is almost certainly the earliest Australian climate change dystopia. In 1985 George Turner published a short story, The Fittest, in which he began to explore the fictional possibilities of the effects of global warming. He quickly expanded this story into a full-length novel published as The Sea and Summer in Britain and as Drowning Towers in the United States. The Sea and Summer is set mainly in Melbourne, a vividly described, particular place, terrifyingly transformed into the utterly unfamiliar. Turner’s core narrative describes a world of mass unemployment and social polarisation, in which rising sea levels have inundated the Bayside suburbs; the poor ‘Swill’ live in high-rise tower blocks, the lower floors of which are progressively submerged; the wealthier ‘Sweet’ in suburbia on higher ground. The paper will argue that Turner’s novel is long overdue a positive critical re-evaluation.' (Publication abstract)