RT info:eu-repo/semantics/article T1 Capitalism clothes it: toxic resilience and undemocratization in the face of climate change A1 Chinchilla Mora, Leonardo K1 Resilience K1 Toxic resilience K1 Critique of capitalism K1 Climate change fiction K1 Undemocratic practices K1 Resiliencia K1 Resiliencia tóxica K1 Critica del capitalismo K1 Ficción de cambio climático K1 Prácticas no democráticas K1 Literatura K1 Literature K1 Medio ambiente K1 Environmental science AB This paper addresses the mechanisms by which capitalism thrives in the imagined climate crises in the works of Nathaniel Rich’s “Odds Against Tomorrow” (2013) and Kim Stanley Robinson‘s “New York 2140” (2017). More specifically, it approaches resilience as toxic resistance that allows capitalism to survive socio-economic and political forces around it. This article also seeks to uncover the ways in which such resilience deters the acknowledgement of capitalism as an unsustainable, life-threatening system. Furthermore, it scrutinizes the tension between public and private places to reveal capitalism’s undemocratic practices. This analysis first identifies the role of futurology as a technocratic resource in maintaining the capitalist system running for “Odds Against Tomorrow” as Mitchell’s professionalism is manipulated to perpetuate such a system. On the other hand, I correlate two models of place-connectedness with various economic terms described in “New York 2140” to arrive at a hypothesis of how resilience becomes toxic in allowing the habitation of New York despite submerging progressively. The second half of this essay concentrates on public and private places in which “Odds Against Tomorrow” showcases the vitality of public places as they nurture democratic practices. It also demonstrates two possible courses of action after suffering from a climate crisis: recovery and perpetuation of corporate American habits or their relinquishment accompanied by the embracement of an agrarian lifestyle. Finally, in the case of “New York 2140”, the interplay between private and public places seeks to demonstrate the social injustices brought about by eco-marginalization for which the undemocratic practices of capitalism also surface. PB Universidad de Alcalá SN 2171-9594 YR 2022 FD 2022 LK http://hdl.handle.net/10017/51735 UL http://hdl.handle.net/10017/51735 LA eng DS MINDS@UW RD 29-mar-2024