Since I'm working on a novel and/or screenplay called The Only Life We Know,
set in 2200, long after industrial civilization's collapse, I'm busy
researching other utopian/dystopian novels about the future. James
Kunstler's book World Made By Hand
was an obvious choice, since Kunstler is an experienced novelist and
one of the most informed and articulate speakers on civilization's
impending collapse.
I'm going to damn the book with faint praise. I think Kunstler has the
facts right about how the availability of resources will disappear, and
hence the things we will have to relearn and do without. He also
joyfully describes how we will rediscover our ability
to connect in community (because we will have no other
choice), and how to entertain ourselves. It's important that we come to
grips with this terrible reality, and, as a companion to Kunstler's
masterful analysis The Long Emergency,
his novel helps us imagine this, and is therefore well worth reading.
What concerns me about the book is that it envisions a future for the
American West that is far, far too similar to the American West of the
early days of the European invasion. As such it reads a bit like a
quirky American Western. From my reading of history and culture, I
think it more likely that the future will be astonishingly unlike the
past millennium, and will represent a cultural discontinuity consistent
with the economic and social discontinuity that the Long Emergency is
going to usher in. In his novel A Scientific Romance,
set in 2500, Ronald Wright (another writer of both fiction and
non-fiction who is pessimistic about the future, as he explained in his
masterful analysis A Short History of
Progress)
reached back to medieval British times, and envisioned a world of
guilds and small, highly diverse and scattered, disconnected
community-societies.
Having spent some time studying scenario planning, I would guess that
our post-civilization future will be wildly different than either the
American Wild West or Medieval Britain. That's what I hope to convey in
my book and/or movie. As the protagonist of A Scientific Romance
explains in thinking about what has happened to the world he knew, "no
culture is normal or inevitable". What emerged after the collapse of
dinosaurs in the last great extinction were birds
-- reptiles taken to the air. We have no reason to believe life in the
world after the next great extinction will be any less astonishing.
Just imagine.
MY GRAVITATIONAL COMMUNITY People
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