news and media
news & media
television
How climate science fiction impacts our world
Arizona Horizon
PBS Eight
April 7, 2015
If you’ve ever seen the movie, “The Day After Tomorrow,” you’ve seen an example of climate science fiction, or “Cli-Fi.” It’s a literary genre that allows us to peek into a future where our actions on the planet play out in full form. Manjana Milkoreit, a postdoctoral research fellow with Arizona State University’s Walton Sustainability Fellowship Program, and Clark Miller, a senior sustainability scientist in the Julie Ann Wrigley Global Institute of Sustainability, will discuss Cli-Fi and how it impacts our current world.
interviews
2015
Climate Change and the Imagination: Q&A with Manjana Milkoreit
articles
2017
Margaret Atwood, Prophet? | Slate
Climate chaos and real estate speculation … in 2140 | ASU Now
2016
If You Still Don’t Get How Global Warming Will Alter Everything, Read Some Climate Fiction | Slate
Building Visions of Humanity’s Climate Future – in Fiction and on Campus | The New York Times
Short-story contest finalists explore futures shaped by climate change | ASU Now
2015
Imagining Climate – How science fiction holds up a mirror to our future | Medium
ASU to imagine water wars scenarios with best-selling author Paolo Bacigalupi | Sustainable Brands
Has ‘Game of Thrones’ affected the way people think about climate change? | Pacific Standard
Meet the world’s expert on climate change and ‘Game of Thrones’ | Climate Progress
Is ‘Game of Thrones’ aiding the global debate on climate change? | Reuters
2014
An interview with Margaret Atwood | Slate
Margaret Atwood to speak on ‘cli-fi,’ or climate fiction | AZ Central