[KF Culture Walk]
Book Recommendation by You Yeonjoon
'The Uninhabitable Earth: Life after Warming'
‘The Uninhabitable Earth: Life after Warming’
David
Wallace-Wells, 2019
Korean translation by Kim Jae-gyeong,
Chusubat, 2020
Climate Change Does Not Have God’s Face
If the axis of prosperity was once fossil fuels, climate change will
be the threshold of its demise, scientists say. As year after year
passes, solving the problem of climate change remains in the realm of
the inexplicable. In the years 2019, 2020, and 2021, we have seen
frequent international news reports of heat and typhoons that use such
superlatives as, “for the first time in 500 years” or, “unprecedented
in the past 600 years.” In the process, we have learned to feel a
familiar powerlessness.
We often imagine that we can use science and technology, as featured
in various futuristic media, to reverse the situation and survive the
disaster in the blink of an eye, unlike other species. However, The
Uninhabitable Earth: Life after Warming flatly rejects this
possibility, stating that while climate change is occurring
disturbingly faster than we had predicted, science and technology
advance extremely slowly. Such imagined futures are nothing but an
ambiguous allegory that hides what should be spoken about and hinders
a clear look at the problem.
On the basis of his numerous columns, author David Wallace-Wells
presents ive indicators and data showing the effects of climate
change to awaken readers’ sense of reality, which many of us have put
aside in a hidden corner of our unconsciousness. The Digital
Revolution should have improved humanity’s productivity, but even
industrialized countries failed to achieve outstanding growth in this
area, he points out. He also talks provocatively, sometimes using
witty and figurative s, about the energy revolution that may
occur in some 400 years and Bitcoin’s carbon dioxide emissions.
The book says that climate change will not devastate our lives with a
bang, like the Great Depression; rather, it will destroy every aspect
of them quietly and definitely, triggering a terrifying chain reaction
of humanitarian challenges as the return of olden-day epidemics,
multiplying conflicts, and 100 million climate refugees, which
undermine such systems as capitalism that run throughout the world.
While enumerating the reasons behind this bleak forecast, the book
makes its message clear, stating that the unfathomable future that
stretches out in front of us is formed by nothing other than our
choices. The face of climate change is human, not God’s, and we need
to understand this unstable system of our own making and think about
how to face it. Our sense of powerlessness does not mean we have been
abandoned; instead it is an of protest and a feeling of
guilt that means the situation still depends on us. Therefore, the
book consoles readers and says that we need to use these feelings as
fuel in internalizing the problems and continue living bravely.
Today, the predictable poverty, losses, and disasters are clearly
visible in news reports, leaving hope in Pandora’s Box, but the book
continues to ask its readers both what is left for us and what it is
that ought to be left. The word “still” embodies possibility, and we
“still” have a future of choices ahead of us. I recommend this book
because it is useful for pondering and making decisions about the
future.
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ㆍAugust 2021:
The Scientific Exploration of Jeju Volcanic Island,
recommended by Do Hyun-ji, Senior Program Officer
ㆍJune 2021:
Shine, recommended by Park Haewon, Assistant Director in
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ㆍMay 2021:
Shine, recommended by Park Haewon, Assistant Director in
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ㆍApril 2021:
Shine, recommended by Park Haewon, Assistant Director in
KF Resource Management Department
ㆍMarch 2021:
Shine, recommended by Park Haewon, Assistant Director in
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ㆍFebruary 2021:
Shine, recommended by Park Haewon, Assistant Director in
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ㆍJanuary 2021:
Boyhood, recommended by Koh Cho-young, Senior Program
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ㆍDecember 2020:
Big Eyes, recommended by Woo Jiwon, Senior Program Officer
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ㆍNovember 2020:
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ㆍOctober 2020:
Give and Take, recommended by Kim Soo-yeon, Assistant
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A Gentleman in Moscow, recommended by Jeong Eun-sil,
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The Horse Thieves, Roads of Time, recommended by KF
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ㆍMay 2020:
Rise of the Robots, recommended by KF President Lee
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