5 episodes

A five-part podcast series about literature, the environment, and people.

Novel Climate Meghan Modafferi

    • Arts
    • 5.0 • 9 Ratings

A five-part podcast series about literature, the environment, and people.

    Ep 5: Rewriting Hurricane Katrina

    Ep 5: Rewriting Hurricane Katrina

    In this episode, Meghan reflects on Hurricane Katrina and the social and political aspects of natural disasters. Political scientist Cedric G. Johnson recaps the events before and after the storm, including continued political effects. Literary scholars Carlyn Ferrari and Stefanie Dunning unpack Jesmyn Ward’s novel Salvage the Bones, which tells the story of a rural family preparing for Katrina and builds upon the pastoral and Southern gothic traditions.




    >>Transcript here.

    >>Music by Chad Crouch, Daniel Birch, Crowander, and Doctor Turtle.

    >>Narration by Maci Bass.

    >>Cover Art by Nonny Cartoons.

    >>Book Recommendations: Black to Nature: Pastoral Return and African American Culture by Dr. Stefanie Dunning and The Neoliberal Deluge: Hurricane Katrina, Late Capitalism, and the Remaking of New Orleans, edited by Cedric G. Johnson

    • 32 min
    Ep 4: The Fairy Tale of Oil Magic

    Ep 4: The Fairy Tale of Oil Magic

    In this episode, Meghan explores the stories we tell — and don't tell — about the extraction and production of oil. Nigerian-British writer Ben Okri's short story What the Tapster Saw leads to discussions of magical realism, African literature and the environment, and the geopolitics of oil. She talks with political and environmental anthropologist Omolade Adunbi about the history of oil in the Niger Delta; postcolonial literature scholar Rose Casey about Okri's short story; and African literature scholar Cajetan Iheka about representations of the environment in African literature.



    >>Transcript here.

    >>Music by Doctor Turtle, Sergey Cheremisinov, and Alex Mason.

    >>Narration by Chimdi Ihezie.

    >>Cover Art by Nonny Cartoons.

    • 28 min
    Ep 3: Imagining the End of The World

    Ep 3: Imagining the End of The World

    In this episode, Meghan reflects on popular themes in post-apocalyptic literature — and how those traditions are reimagined in Octavia E. Butler's novel Dawn (book 1 of the Xenogenesis series). The novel, and the episode, invite you to consider how we imagine world-ending disasters and what that says about our culture. Guests include literary scholar Justin L. Mann, on Afrofuturism and national security in Dawn; curator Natalie Russell, on Octavia Butler's archives; and anthropologist Joe Masco, on the connections between nuclear warfare and climate change. 



    >>Transcript here.

    >>Music by Bio Unit, Chad Crouch, Scott Holmes, Blear Moon, and Doctor Turtle.

    >>Cover Art by Nonny Cartoons.

    >>Learn more about Afrofuturism here. 

    >>Learn more about Octavia Butler here and here. 

    • 27 min
    Ep 2: A New Kind of Adventure at Sea

    Ep 2: A New Kind of Adventure at Sea

    In this episode, Meghan explores the history of seafaring literature — and how that tradition is updated by Monique Roffey's novel, Archipelago. The novel, and the episode, invite you on a meandering, island-hopping adventure in the Caribbean that create linkages of meaning across various histories and geographies. Guests include literary scholars Parker Krieg and Ali Glassie, archaeologist Konrad Antczak, cultural studies scholar Giuseppe Sofo, sociologist Mimi Sheller, and climate scientist Michael A. Taylor.



    >>Transcript here.

    >>Music by Doctor Turtle, Pictures of the Floating World, and Alex Mason

    >>Narration by Ashley Gunsteens.

    >>Cover Art by Nonny Cartoons.

    • 31 min
    Ep 1: The Stories We Tell

    Ep 1: The Stories We Tell

    In this pilot episode, Meghan reflects on competing origin stories of the Anthropocene, ranging from post-WWII all the way back to 1452. She talks with Rachel Ramirez, an environmental justice reporter, Matthew Schneider-Mayerson, a social scientist, and Min Hyoung Song, a professor of English with a focus on the environment and race. Topics include the connections between redlining, environmental injustice, and the coronavirus; the history of the U.S. environmental movement; how readers are impacted by climate fiction; and how to read with an attunement to racial and environmental issues. Future episodes will dig into specific novels and their cultural and historical contexts.



    >>Transcript here.

    >>Recommendation: Min Hyoung Song's next book is Climate Lyricism, which will be published by Duke University Press in 2022.

    >>Music by Blear Moon, Pictures of a Floating World, Lobo Loco Doctor Turtle, and Andy G. Cohen.

    >>Cover Art by Nonny Cartoons.

    • 32 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
9 Ratings

9 Ratings

rocketboy9890 ,

Unique and thought-provoking

This podcast presents a unique link between the environment, race, culture, and literature. Incredibly thought-provoking, it will leave you curious and eager to read the books discussed. Modafferi does a wonderful job of taking a complex topic like climate change and making it easier to grasp and consider. Modaferri is a storyteller, painting the picture for the listener.

KDTemple21 ,

Amazing project!

Thoughtful, informed, and entertaining.

Josking11 ,

A Unique and Valuable Approach

The host does a great job of considering climate change with a lens I had not yet experienced. They are obviously passionate about the subject and still open to making discoveries along the way and I think that makes for great listening.

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