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alxd ✏️ solarpunk prompts

@Julian_1_2_3_4_5 I would be careful with calling it , the movie has a lot of implicit neoliberal assumptions and puts a lot of technosolutionist proposals, doesn't show a lot of communities.

It's a great introduction to the idea of not giving up though! I personally recommend the movie to people who have had no experience with hopeful climate fiction at all.

The company owning the movie is pretty hard to work with as well, we failed to get educational screenings multiple times :/

Do you have any recs on good solarpunk movies/documentaries?

@realbadat I usually go with anarchist technology documentaries.

In my big Solarpunk essay ( alxd.org/solarpunk-lenses-and- ) I mention youtube.com/watch?v=JPxCUzGGDK , which was THE thing to inspire me to look for Solarpunk.

I love the series on the Southeast Asian Makers, youtube.com/playlist?list=PLkM

They're less "comprehensive", but they're very real and very awesome :)

If I remember anything more, I'll let you know!

alxd - solarpunk hacker · Solarpunk: lenses and foundationsRound Mirror by Ethan Sees Last year I published a lengthy videoessay on Solarpunk as a part of collaboration with a philosophical YouTube channel "Myśleć Głębiej" (Think That Through in English). It took me a few months to translate it and update a few sections (especially regarding cyberpunk's romanticism), but I'd like to present you with a written form of my essay - available in audio HERE! The recorded form follows a deeper exploration of philosophy of the movement, thoroughly discussing the notions of cultural hieroglyphs and squeecore I only briefly mention in the text below: Who am I? My name is Pawel Ngei, on the internet also known as A-L-X-D. I’m a software developer and hacker, someone analysing technology outside of a formal framework of a company or university. I’m especially interested in cultural narratives about technology and engineering, their impacts on societies and communities. I first encountered Solarpunk soon after the “Notes towards a Manifesto” came to be at Arizona State University in 2014 while looking for a way to express some …

I’d recommend checking out our local documentary community, !documentaries@slrpnk.net, which is chock full of docs! :D

Though admittedly, most of the ones there are not directly related to solarpunk, since the movement is really only just catching on in the mainstream, so there’s not much documentary/movie content about it.

The only fictional movie I can think of that’s solarpunky would be Strange World from (ironically) Disney.

I had a similar observation when watching it, particularly around eco-modernism.

As Giorgos Kallis put it,

“eco-modernism — that is, the idea that all environmental and social problems can ultimately be solved with the application of technology, and that the only solution to the problems of modern technology is more modern technology.”