[PeDAGoG] Reading list around regenerative futures for Young Adults?

singhvan at rcn.com singhvan at rcn.com
Mon Sep 14 03:22:48 CEST 2020


Older teens might appreciate Ursula K. Le Guin's works of speculative fiction: 
1. The classic short story "The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas" https://sites.asiasociety.org/asia21summit/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/3.-Le-Guin-Ursula-The-Ones-Who-Walk-Away-From-Omelas.pdf 
2. The Dispossessed, which depicts a detailed imaginative fictional anarchist (communitarian) utopia and its capitalist/ feudal counterpart 
3. Always Coming Home, a depiction of a future California inspired by Native ways of being, structurally not a novel at all, but quite amazing in my opinion. 


Also of interest is Pacific Edge by Kim Stanley Robinson, a small book about a fictional utopian community in California working out the balance between human and ecological well-being. And The Memory of Water, by Finnish writer Emmi Itaranta. 


I appreciate all the suggestions - must expand my reading list! 
Best, 


Vandana 

----- Original Message -----

From: "Christine Dann" <christine at horomaka.org> 
To: gta-pedagog at lists.ourproject.org 
Sent: Sunday, September 13, 2020 5:11:51 PM 
Subject: Re: [PeDAGoG] Reading list around regenerative futures for Young Adults? 


Dave Goulson (2019) The Garden Jungle or Gardening to Save the Planet 


Goulson is Professor of Biological Sciences at the University of Sussex - and a really good writer who mixes up his practical gardening experiences with the science stories he tells. I was initially worried that it might be 'too English' to apply to New Zealand conditions, but all gardens everywhere have soil microorganisms, insects, birds, etc. as well as plants, and while each place has specific interactions going on, the principles behind them are all the same, and these are relevant everywhere. I wish this book had been around when I started gardening in my teens. 



Christine 





On 14/09/20 8:34 am, Callie Berman wrote: 



Radical Hope by Jonathan Lear - for a historical example of solidarity ethics amidst cultural change 



On Sun, Sep 13, 2020 at 9:19 PM John Foran < foran at soc.ucsb.edu > wrote: 

<blockquote>


Saci Lloyd, The Carbon Diaries 


On Sun, Sep 13, 2020 at 8:02 AM Ashish Kothari < ashishkothari at riseup.net > wrote: 

<blockquote>


William Morris, News from Nowhere 

Paul Raskin, Journey to Earthland 

Rahul Sankrityayan, Baisvi Sadi (The 22nd Century) (not sure available, there is an excerpt in tarun Saint ed, The Gollancz Book of South Asian Science Fiction) 

Ashish 


LATEST! Pluriverse: A Post-Development Dictionary ( thepluriverse.org ) 
and www.globaltapestryofalternatives.org Ashish Kothari
Kalpavriksh
Apt 5 Shree Datta Krupa
908 Deccan Gymkhana
Pune 411004, India
Tel: 91-20-25654239; 91-20-25675450 http://kalpavriksh.org www.vikalpsangam.org www.radicalecologicaldemocracy.org www.iccaconsortium.org www.acknowlej.org http://ashishkothari51.blogspot.in/ Twitter: @chikikothari 
On 13/09/20 12:04 pm, Pallavi Varma Patil wrote: 

<blockquote>



Dear all, 


What fiction / non fiction books or writings would you recommend for young adults to introduce to them the idea of ecological/ solidarity based futures ? 


Sujit and I have the following ideas but am sure you all have many more and it would be nice to compile a reading list together for children/ young adults. 
Ours are as follows: 
1. 'Year of the Weeds' by Siddhartha Sarma (Very clever and imaginative writing for young adults fictionalising the famous indigenous Niyamgiri struggle against mining ) 
2. Daniel Greenberg's 'Free at Last ' about the Sudbury Valley School 
3. Entropia: Life Beyond Industrial Civilisation by Samuel Alexander 
4. Our own Gandhi Note book to introduce Gandhi to young readers 
5. Ela Bhatt's Anubandh and "We are poor but so many". 
6. The following chapters in Alternative futures: Ch 35, Looking Back into the Future : India, South Asia, and the world in 2010 ( pp 627-645), and Ch 18: Dare to dream ( pp 326- 340) 


What else and what more would you recommend to us that can be used as a reading list for Young Adults? 


Many thanks in advance! 


Pallavi 





https://naitaleem.wordpress.com/ 



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