Encounter with the capitalocene
This image invokes the green moralism that Timothy Clark questions. While it is evidently good to recycle, the image is intrusive as it does not consider the barriers to entry to recycling. There are plenty reasons why people might not be recycling, particularly if we consider for example the impact COVID has had on our dependency of single use plastics such as face-masks. But this does not mean the individual cannot have a liberalist agency, they can use their voice to compel change. Part of being human and having an infinite capacity in the liberalist sense is to be able to invoke change beyond our necessities, and this is something that will have to be considered.
This video explores the green new deal (GND) and entails what will happen to individuals as a consequence of changes to mitigate climate change. It also portrays the counter arguments – that it is expensive, or socialist. This video made me consider why the capitalocene is not a good term – as it is divisive, and will play into the hands of those against the GND because it has a "political agenda". Therefore, the video's most compelling moment was displaying what the GDR meant to individuals, as it allows us to imagine our role in what lies ahead.
Works cited:
“Liberalism and Green Moralism.” The Cambridge Introduction to Literature and the Environment, by Timothy Clark, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2011, pp. 102–110. Cambridge Introductions to Literature.