Climate ChangeMain MenuIntroductionTimeline"2012" - Overview"Eden" by Tim Lebbon - Overview"Snowpiercer" - Overview"The Day After Tomorrow" - OverviewWorks CitedByron Matysek9e3d7f49bbedbf10b3c828457e547d45773953d7Emily White828aec9878c5743ec1536806a0be2b4768e65079Logan Bogue85869dc40ccec3a5ac2597e18dd1b1a7f653fd92Zachary Harrison557a0a5d8614d660b3baf9cb64f2642dc1af668a
"Dr. Stone" - Overview
12023-03-14T05:51:14-07:00Emily White828aec9878c5743ec1536806a0be2b4768e650794259112plain2023-03-17T15:18:36-07:00Emily White828aec9878c5743ec1536806a0be2b4768e65079Dr. Stone is a manga, which is comic produced in Japan. In the manga, a natural disaster turns all living things on earth to stone. This was catastrophic, cities fell, all technology was lost, and the world was returned to a prehistoric state. This take on climate change and disasters is more abstract than films like The Day After Tomorrow or the book Eden, but it does so in a way that directly appeals to younger audiences. Dr. Stone provides horrifying pictures of people trapped in stone and the steps needed to save humanity. The story of Dr. Stone is covered through 26 volumes from the span of 2017 to 2022, but volume one will be the primary focus. This manga series has also been adapted to television as an anime series. This manga relates to our theme of climate change because it is inferred that the combination of the lack of science in the previous society and the environmental neglect triggered the disaster of petrification, punishing humanity.
12023-03-14T05:47:53-07:00Emily White828aec9878c5743ec1536806a0be2b4768e65079"The Day After Tomorrow" - ThemesZachary Harrison8plain2023-03-16T15:41:33-07:00Zachary Harrison557a0a5d8614d660b3baf9cb64f2642dc1af668a
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1media/ds 1.jpg2023-03-14T06:04:40-07:00Emily White828aec9878c5743ec1536806a0be2b4768e65079"Dr. Stone" - Summary11Condition of the environment from the anime adaptionimage_header2023-03-17T13:22:10-07:00Emily White828aec9878c5743ec1536806a0be2b4768e65079