Climate change in popular culture
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Climate change in popular culture The issue of climate change, its possible effects, and related human-environment interaction have entered popular culture since the late 20th century.
Science historian Naomi Oreskes has noted that "there's a huge disconnect between what professional scientists have studied and learned in the last 30 years, and what is out there in the popular culture".[1] An academic study contrasts the relatively rapid acceptance of ozone depletion as reflected in popular culture with the much slower acceptance of the scientific consensus on global warming.[2]
Some examples of global warming references in popular culture include:
- The Archie Comics Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Adventures are set in their present (1980s/1990s), but also include time travels to a future, in which New York City is flooded because of global warming and the greenhouse effect.
- In the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode Déjà Q from 1990 the crew suggests an artificial amplification of global warming using greenhouse gases to counter the cooling effects of dust from the impact of a moon on a planet.
- The Prometheus Award-winning novel Fallen Angels depicts a world where a radical technophobic green movement dramatically cuts greenhouse gas emissions, only to find that manmade global warming was staving off a new ice age.
- The movie Waterworld from 1995, starring Kevin Costner, is set in a future world, where the polar ice caps have melted due to global warming and the Earth is almost entirely covered with water.
- The movie The Arrival from 1996, starring Charlie Sheen, is about the attempt by extraterrestrial aliens to secretly cause global warming and thereby terraform Earth into an environment more suited to their needs.
- Catastrophic climate change due to abrupt shutdown of thermohaline circulation was the subject of the 2004 blockbuster, The Day After Tomorrow. Experts say that the scenario described is impossible.[3]
- Global warming was spoofed in five South Park episodes: Two Days Before the Day After Tomorrow, Spontaneous Combustion, Goobacks, Smug Alert! and Manbearpig.
- A documentary film, An Inconvenient Truth, starring former United States Vice President Al Gore was released in 2006; the film was the third highest grossing documentary film in the United States to date.[4]
- A book by Michael Crichton, State of Fear, was released criticizing the Global warming consensus and accusing its proponents of using fear tactics.
- The Science in the Capitol series of novels by Kim Stanley Robinson (Forty Signs of Rain, 2004; Fifty Degrees Below, 2005; Sixty Days and Counting, 2007) describes the impact of global warming on Americans and Buddhist monks from the Ganges delta
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Scientific opinion • Attribution of causes • Effects • Mitigation • Adaptation • Controversy • Politics • Economics |
Related articles |
Climate change • Deforestation • Global climate modelling • Global cooling • Global dimming • Greenhouse effect • Greenhouse gases Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change • Kyoto Protocol • Peak Oil • Renewable energy • Temperature data |