https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/0950236X.2025.2551327#abstract

*Authors*: Matt Morgenstern

Published online: *31 August 2025*

https://doi.org/10.1080/0950236X.2025.2551327

*Abstract*: This essay analyses representations of climate engineering in
two novels: Kim Stanley Robinson’s The Ministry for the Future and Neal
Stephenson’s Termination Shock. Also known as geoengineering, climate
engineering is poised to utilise technological processes as solutions to
climate change’s impacts. Climate engineering has attracted much
state-corporate attention as a potential climate solution and has emerged
as a site of struggle for environmental and climate justice efforts. As
works of fiction, Robinson’s and Stephenson’s novels extrapolate
representations of the near future, depicting the onset of the climate
crisis, the merits of climate engineering programmes, and the labour
infrastructure (or climate labour) required for their realisation. Through
their emulation of different workers’ experiences, these novels shift how
we understand the politics of characters and narration in climate fiction.
Ultimately, Robinson’s and Stephenson’s novels suggest that the climate
labour of climate engineering depends on those tasked with its maintenance
and execution.

*Source: Taylor & Francis*

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