Introduction 1. Nerd Ecology 2. Stellar Cosmopolitans: Star Trek and a Federation of Species 3. The Destruction of the Sky: Virtual Worlds as Refuge 4. The Great Music: Restoration as Counter-Apocalypse in the Tolkien Legendarium 5. Slayer and Signal: Joss Whedon Versus the Big Bads 6. Icons of Survival: Metahumanism as Planetary Defense Conclusion
Explores nerd culture's engagement with environmental issues, from Star Trek and Lord of the Rings, to Marvel's X-Men and Joss Whedon's Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
Anthony Lioi is Associate Professor of Liberal Arts and English and Director of the Writing and Communication Center at the Juilliard School, New York, USA.
Lioi employs an eclectic assembly of critical tools, from semiotics
and close reading to critical theory and anthropology ... [He] is
to be praised for combining clarity of argument with richly
detailed examples.
*Times Literary Supplement*
The nerd as a biopolitical category rejected as waste, machine, and
non-reproductive deviant launches Anthony Lioi’s insightful study
of nerd culture’s imaginative contributions to environmental social
change and justice. This playfully written, serious take on
“unpopular” culture will be read across popular culture studies,
American studies, and ecocriticism for its incisive analysis of the
cultural intersections of toxicity, technology, and rejected
people.
*Cheryl Lousley, Associate Professor of English/Interdisciplinary
Studies, Lakehead University Orillia, Canada*
In Nerd Ecology Anthony Lioi unleashes his superhero powers to
uncover underground and celestial environmental cultures. This
aptly smart, witty, and quirky study poses Geektopia as a place
where black, queer, nerds become interplanetary tricksters; where
Dante, Darwin and classical philososophy meet Star Trek; where
Pynchon, postmodern aesthetics and The Matrix find themselves in a
(digital) wildlife refuge; and where Buffy the Vampire Slayer
fights for environmental justice. This trek through unpopular
culture takes on an extraordinary range of environmental topics,
including mining, waste, climate change, cetacean extinction,
restoration ecology, racism and eugenics, cyborg and queer ecology,
and eco-cosmopolitanism. Lioi’s book is fresh, riveting,
surprising, invaluable—POW!
*Stacy Alaimo, Professor of English, University of Texas at
Arlington, USA.*
Nerds unite! This book convincingly proves that from Lord of the
Rings to The Hunger Games, fantasy and science fiction are much
more than a guilty pleasure. They provide a storehouse rich with
narratives, characters, tropes, questions, values, ethics, and
metaphors offering fans (and there are many of us) a lively
(Wachowskian) matrix of art, literature, film, games, technology
and science for thinking about and planning, not apocalypse, but a
plausible future of interspecies wellbeing and planetary
health.
*Joni Adamson, Professor of Environmental Humanities, Arizona State
University, USA*
Focusing on the rich ecological content of nerd culture, this
enlightening and compelling landmark study makes the absolutely
central point of considering nerd culture as a resource for
ecological politics. Nerd Ecology sustains a rigorous, persuasive
and much needed conversation between environmental humanities and
American Studies, showing how, from now on, transnational
considerations of thinking beyond the nation should include the
cultures of the nerds, with their transformative power of
addressing planetary emergency.
*Sonia Di Loreto, Università di Torino, ITALY*
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