Amitav Ghosh's "The Great Derangement" critically examines humanity's collective failure to comprehend and effectively respond to the climate crisis. Ghosh questions why literature, history, and politics struggle to grasp the immense scale and violence of environmental change, suggesting future generations might view our current inaction as a profound imaginative and moral lapse.
Ghosh argues that the extreme nature of contemporary climate events resists conventional storytelling in serious literary fiction, often relegating such themes to other genres. He also scrutinizes the oversimplifications in historical narratives of the carbon economy, revealing a more intricate, globally interconnected story than commonly presented. The book suggests that both politics and literature have become focused on individual moral reckoning rather than fostering collective action. Ghosh proposes that the climate crisis necessitates imagining new forms of human existence, a task for which fiction is uniquely suited.
Why You Should Read?
- Explores the cultural and political reasons behind our collective inaction on climate change.
- Offers a unique perspective on how literature and history grapple with environmental crises.
- Promotes critical thinking on collective responsibility and imaginative solutions.
- A powerful call to action from a celebrated author on the most urgent issue of our time.