Jump to content

solarpunk

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]

From solar +‎ -punk, modeled after cyberpunk. This etymology is incomplete. You can help Wiktionary by elaborating on the origins of this term. needs coiner

Noun

[edit]

solarpunk (countable and uncountable, plural solarpunks)

  1. (uncountable) A movement and subgenre of speculative fiction that focuses on community, sustainability, technology powered by renewable energy, and a free and egalitarian society.
    Coordinate term: biopunk
    • 2008 April 30, john-roberts, “From Steampunk to Solarpunk”, in Republic of the Bees[1], Blogspot:
      So, in honor of the Beluga Skysail's maiden voyage, I'm going to suggest a new literary genre: solarpunk.
    • 2015, Evelyn Deshane, Beyond Monsters and Myths: The Transgender Future and Progress Narrative in Speculative Fiction:
      In a short blog written for the LGBT magazine Vitality, Claudie Arsenault explains that “solarpunk is all about envisioning a positive future, deeply rooted in sustainability, community, and acceptance.”
    • 2017, Marisha Knutson, Summus Deus: A Collection of Short Stories (Honors Thesis, Portland State University):
      “Letters to Lovelace” takes place before the “revelation” as mentioned by Novice Broder in “Moss Piglets.” and is pre-greentech, but is the catalyst for the founding of their solarpunk world.
    • 2017, Paul March-Russell, “Organic Systems: Environments, Bodies and Cultures in Science Fiction, Birkbeck College London, 16 September 2017”, in Foundation, volume 46, number 128:
      Lastly (although actually the first paper on the panel), Rhys Williams explored the merits and limitations of the emerging sub-genre of 'solarpunk'.
    • 2017 June, Sally Adee, “The power of good”, in New Scientist, volume 234, number 3129:
      Most of my novels, I think, are actually fun because I'm doing realism in a way the world needs. As for anyone picking up the mantle, there's a group of young writers who call themselves solarpunk, and what they're trying is all about adaptation.
    • 2023 February 2, “Newly Published, From Climate Fiction to a Lost Congolese Princess”, in The New York Times[2]:
      Drawing from literary movements like Afrofuturism, hopepunk and solarpunk, this collection of 12 short stories approaches climate change with hope for the radically different futures humans might create.
  2. (countable) A supporter of the solarpunk movement.

See also

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]