On Life Support

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A01=Matthew I Thompson
activism
animal
Animal Studies
Ark
Author_Matthew I Thompson
Buckminster Fuller
Cannibalism
Category=ATFA
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Christopher Bird
climate change
David Cronenberg
Ecocriticism
Elizabeth Kolbert
Environmental History
Environmental Justice
Environmental studies
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Film
Film Studies
Frogs
Hollywood
John C. Lilly
justice
literature
Logan's Run
metaphor
metonymy
Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth
Orca
Peter Tomkins
Plant Studies
plants
Rachel Carson
Rhetoric
Save the Whales
Sci-fi
Shivers
Silent Running
Silent Spring
Soylent Green
Star Trek IV
Steve Wonder
The Day of the Dolphin
The Kirlian Witness
The Planet of the Apes
The Population Bomb
The Secret Life of Plants
Walon Green

Product details

  • ISBN 9781517917326
  • Weight: 408g
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Apr 2026
  • Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Finding strategies for today's environmental movement in classic science fiction films

What can science fiction film tell us about the course of the modern ecological movement? On Life Support traces how the environmental concerns of the 1970s were embedded in the eco-dystopian cinema of the era - and considers its implications for ecological thought and activism today.

Illuminating the patterns that shape our thinking about nonhuman nature, Matthew I. Thompson pairs iconic films such as Soylent Green and Silent Running with the transformational environmentalist texts that inspired them and kick-started the modern environmental movement, including Rachel Carson's Silent Spring and Buckminster Fuller's Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth. Thompson examines this confluence of literature and cinema to show how, as they translated environmentalism for Hollywood's audiences, these movies distilled the movement's concepts into a form that revealed their inherent contradictions.

A sensitive analysis of the tensions that complicate environmentalist praxis—especially between desire and fear in the activist impulse - On Life Support offers a timely critique of the politics of environmental containment and control, calling instead for a politics of interconnection and contamination. It is, after all, by inviting complexity and chaos that we begin to undermine the myth of human mastery, letting nature flourish on its own terms.

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Matthew I. Thompson is assistant professor of film studies at the University of Regina in Canada.

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