Robert Marzec on Climate Change and Modern Fiction

Robert Marzec, Modern Fiction Studies

While not approved by official geological organizations, the term anthropocene has grown in use to describe the current geological age. Proponents of the term use it to mark the time period where humans have had a significant impact on Earth's geology and ecosystems.

MFS Modern Fiction Studies Assistant Editor Robert Marzec put the journal's focus on the Anthropocene in the Winter 2018 issue titled "Anthropocene Fictions." A collection of fives essays joined his comprehensive introduction about the epoch.

Marzec, a professor of environmental and postcolonial studies in the Department of English at Purdue University, joined us for a discussion about climate change and how it connects with modern fiction.

Publish Date:
Related Multimedia
Helene Hedian on Building Patient-Centered Trans Health Care
On this month's Hopkins Press Podcast, we talk with Helene Hedian, MD, Director of Clinical Education, Center for Transgender and Gender Expansive Health, discussing data in a new study published in the February 2024 edition of Journal of Health Care for the...
Hopkins Press Podcast 3.2 Helene Hedian on Building Patient-Centered Trans Healthcare Promotional Tile
Gabriela Lee on Reading Cinderella in the Philippines
We begin our third season of the Hopkins Press Podcast with an interview with speculative fiction author and children's literature scholar Gabriela Lee, whose recent article in Children’s Literature Association Quarterly, “When the Shoe Doesn't Fit: Reading...
Author photo of Gabriela Lee and the cover art for Children's LIterature Association Quarterly