'Cli-fi' might not save the world, but writing it could help with your eco-anxiety
- Written by Dr Rachel Hennessy, Lecturer in Creative Writing, The University of Melbourne
The consequences of climate change weigh on all of us, especially as we face an El Niño summer, with floods and fires already making themselves felt in the Australian environment.
But even outside of being directly effected, there is evidence that mere awareness of climate change can be detrimental to your mental health and wellbeing[1]. Terms such as “climate change anxiety[2]”, “eco-anxiety[3]” and “solastalgia[4]” are regularly used to describe the negative emotional states created by thinking and worrying about climate change and environmental destruction.
If just knowing about climate change is emotionally difficult, what is it like spending years focusing on and writing about the topic? Research has looked at the emotional impact close engagement with climate change can have on groups such as climate scientists[5] and[6] climate activists[7].
But little time has been given to writers of climate fiction, or “cli-fi” – a relatively new genre of fiction focused on climate change.
What can a genre do?
Cli-fi[8] has been touted as one of the ways to help save the world, with an emphasis on how imagining our future might make us reconsider our relationship to the natural world.