Eco-fiction discussion
What is Eco-fiction? How do you define it?
I agree on the major component of the story, but I wouldn't restrict the setting to our Earth. There is much eco-fiction that is set on other planets.

The overlap between eco-fiction and science fiction is probably just as blurred as the zone between fantasy and science fiction.

Anyway, I think your core definition for eco-fiction is pretty sound, though I agree with Michael that there's no reason to limit the setting to earth, specifically.
A definition that allows for science fictional or non-science fictional interpretations would seem to me to be a good idea. I feel like genres/themes should be treated as a Venn diagram, rather than a tunnel of concentric circles whose boundaries never cross. So you could just as easily have an "eco-fic thriller" as an "eco-fic sci-fi thriller" as an "eco-fic rom-com", etc.

"Eco-fiction is ecologically oriented fiction, which may be nature-oriented (non-human oriented) or environmental-oriented (human impacts on nature). Genres of eco-fiction are found in prose, novels, short stories, films, and other fiction and include–but are not limited to–pastoral, science fiction, fantasy, speculative fiction, adventure, wilderness, solarpunk, western, literary fiction, and climate fiction. Author Jim Dwyer said that eco-fiction “might be simply described as a critical perspective on the relationship between literature and the natural world, and the place of humanity within.” Source: Chico News & Review
I like Mike Vasey's description:
'Stories set in fictional landscapes that capture the essence of natural ecosystems…[They] can build around human relationships to these ecosystems or leave out humans altogether. The story itself, however, takes the reader into the natural world and brings it alive…Ideally, the landscapes and ecosystems–whether fantasy or real–should be as ‘realistic’ as possible and plot constraints should accord with ecological principals."

Most people seem to believe that this is our planet. Something "you" can hang on to. More likely it appears to be our moment in time, a thing that has no substance of it's own, but still manages to keep everything in place.
I wonder what is eco-truth? 65 million years ago the dinosaurs entered the twilight zone. They were well on the way to developing a brain to body mass ratio that would have allowed some of them to stop anything from blocking their access to advanced problem solving and unlimited access to material goods, a race that has a lump of coal in a stocking as a reward.
“might be simply described as a critical perspective on the relationship between literature and the natural world, and the place of humanity within.”
That's pretty clear to me until I get to the meaning of natural world. What exactly is unnatural? Perhaps he is talking about behavior?
"plot constraints should accord with ecological principals"
We could probably spend all day discussing what that includes or doesn't include.
It's probably too much to ask that we try to get all life across the finish line at the end of the day.

This went on for 45 minutes, and then in the last 5 minutes, a solution to the mysteries which was a simple green solution for a common old city problem, how to revitalize crumbling city centers. For me, the simple way the green ending solved the multiple mysteries had more impact than the entire program.
I suppose that could have been the goal of the writers, a twist ending, but I wonder if the writers really understood how much the ending could totally neutralize entertainment value of the normal tv mystery format they pump out every episode.
Sometimes the last thought to enter a readers head as they turn the last page is all it takes to be eco-friendly.

I would call this Fantasy, not Eco-fiction. Eco-fiction should be restricted to our own planet. She deserves her own genre.

We need to de-blur it. Eco-fiction is earth based. Science Fiction is not. It's all Fantasy Fiction, subdivide how you want from there... We can't get an audience for Eco-fiction because it is so "blurred" but as Robert has said, we need the messages of an earth-based Eco-fiction now more than ever (though I myself agree with E.O. Wilson that the earth gains no benefit from the overpopulation of any one species, including the human primate).

Anyway, I think your core d..."
I know, it is a mess. You can put them all together, mix and match... and really, maybe what I am referring to is an issue with "marketing"--remember when Miles can't publish his book because they don't know how they are going to market it? It doesn't fit into one clean genre? (Sideways).
Still, I think Eco-fiction (alone) should refer to OUR beloved threatened planet.

But that would imply that "ecology" is something that only has local relevance, that concern about it is limited to the earth. For an example of how that's not the case, take the Galileo probe: at the end of its service it was deliberately crashed into Jupiter and incinerated, specifically (partly) so that it wouldn't accidentally contaminate any of the Jovian moons with earth bacteria; like Europa, which could conceivably have an ocean ecosystem utterly unique from anything evolved on our planet.
That's a piece of science (non-)fiction right there, and it could hardly be more "eco" (although Europa has already given rise to various pieces of actual sci-fi too).

Especially with movies, if it has an eco-fiction plot, though more likely, an eco-sci-fi plot, the movie becomes famous for other reasons, and though it can be described as eco-fiction after it is famous, it doesn't start out that way.
Dirty spacecraft stories seem like an exception to the rule in terms of the here and now, I think they could easily have their own sub genre.
Loren Eiseley talked about how the slime mold flings out bits of itself ahead of it's body as it travels along. You could say people are flinging out random bits of genetic material accidentally left in deep space probes, as well as whatever is on all the probes, rockets and satellites we send up in our local atmosphere.
Bacteria can live around nuclear reactors, extremely high or low temperature surroundings, incredible chemical concoctions, far underground and way out into space, so I would say we have already done a pretty good job of contaminating the local space zone. A self fulfilling prophecy in the search for life in the solar system, the life we find out there could be our own.
A funny thing happened on the way to the forum,
"Galileo probe: at the end of its service it was deliberately crashed into Jupiter and incinerated, specifically (partly) so that it wouldn't accidentally contaminate any of the Jovian moons with earth bacteria;"
You forgot to mention pollution caused by the 34 pounds of plutonium that Galileo was carrying as a power source which may have actually exploded from being crushed by Jupiter's atmospheric pressure. At any rate we have sent out plenty of those plutonium batteries in space probes out into space. I hope they don't crash into anything in the next couple of billion years.

Good Job, Virginia. Even when solarpunk or cli-fi invent imaginary worlds when treating environmental problems, they are usually based on our own planet's basic nature.

What I guess I am saying is I do not agree that science fiction and eco-fiction are the same or should be the same. It is this confusion that leads to the booksellers asking me what is eco-fiction? Why does it deserve it's own genre. So what I am going to say is Eco-fiction should be limited to fiction that centers around our earth and nature, as it is, no fantasy, period. Call science fiction what it is --a bunch of fantasy that may or may not include "real" science but please leave it out of eco-fiction. Let the science of ecology, our earth, have its own earth-based genre and let's call this Eco-fiction. This is my story and I'm stickin' to it!

You have a well defined genre, but I am thinking it seems to be somewhere inside the whole eco-fiction sector.
Are Solar Punk and Reality Earth Eco-Fiction subsets of the same set?

Amazon apparently treats Eco fiction, Environmental fiction, and Ecological fiction as three different entities.
Is it always history when a fictitious representation of a true situation is the same as a factual representation of a true situation?
Besides the truth characters speak, would the only fiction be what comes out of the characters' mouths?
What set do you suppose Eco-Fiction a subset of.

Amazon apparently treats Eco fiction, Environmental fiction, and Ecological fiction as three different entities.
Is it always history when a fictitious representat..."
Amazon will not move my novel into any of these subgeneres after numerous requests. They told me I would have go through the publisher of the novel to put it in these categories aside from the small fact that I am the publisher. It's very enervating. I read a blog that said Amazon favors it's own authors that publish through them and is not as helpful for those who don't. The idea that they do not a promote a level playing field is no great surprise considering past issues.
On to your questions: it appears to be about literary fiction versus not? Literary fiction incorporates real world aspects into the story along with trying to convey some kind of meaning/message to the reader while non-lit fiction does not strive for this. Does this get to your question? If your question comes down to what is fiction, YIKES! I usually need a glass of wine for something like this!

When you list a book not published through Amazon how is the genre set for your book?
If you publish it yourself not through Amazon can you republish it yourself again through Amazon and then pick the genre?
Is there a downside for doing that?
I think you will need a glass of wine for the fictional part of this discussion.

Science fiction is often defined as a story where certain aspects of the world it plays itself out in have sciences in them that do not exist (yet). There are a lot of differences between them. Star Trek would be a space opera, lots of drama with space ships and aliens. Never Let Me Go is also science fiction since, although human cloning is theoretically possible, it was not invented in the 70ties and has never been done before. Star Wars seems to be a mix since "the force" is so badly explained it is basically Space Magic. Its space ships, clone wars, alien species and intergalactic politics make it more sci-fi than fantasy though.
You have sci-fi love stories, sci-fi action stories, sci-fi military fiction, sci-fi that never leaves earth at all, sci-fi that crosses over with fantasy so much it stops being obvious one or the other, sci-fi where the aliens attack us, exploration of other planets sci-fi etc etc. Even double cross overs, sci-fi action love stories, sci-fi exploration space opera, sci-fi dystopian horror stories.
The thing is, its sci-fi because its worlds workings are accepted as science by the characters and the universe it all happens in as opposed to fantasy where everything is magic. Ofcourse, there is enough fantasy out there where the magic system is treated as a science and science-fiction where the science could just as well be magic (like the earlier mentioned star wars). But sci-fi seldom breaks the laws of physics without having a human build/invented device to aid them while fantasy does this without hesitation.
So I think, that if you want a good definition of Eco-Fiction you'll have to accept that there are going to be a lot of crossovers and ambiguous parts and books that cannot be so easily classified. I think it might be useful to decide whether Eco-Fiction points towards its setting, like fantasy and sci-fi, or towards its plot points and development (like romance and action).
So, according to your definition, would the movie "Avatar" count as eco-fiction? It does put a LOT of effort into creating a believable fictional ecosystem and centers a good part of its plot around two parties either wanting to preserve it or exploit it. Would The Windup Girl count? Its dystopian but its setting as its plot hinges on the fact that mankind has fucked up and now has to deal with mass extinction of, among other things, edible vegetation. Would any book describing a fictional character surviving in whichever natural environment count? Would Watership Down, a book about the displacement of a group rabbits, count?
Edit: Oh dear I did not realize I wrote this much. I hope I don't sound like I'm rambling.

I like your take on science fiction and fantasy. Using the intent instead of the device to classify a story simplifies things.

Or maybe the opposite, a story about love, or revenge or politics but all set within a world/universe where there is just a ton of nature. Or has a very heavy nature religion based society where preservation and careful tending is just something everyone does. Or just set in a sprawling forest or desert or something. You know, lots of environmental descriptions, maybe even a bit of it as a plot device (the fight over a peace of land, trying to ruin the land/forest/property for the other party out of spite). It would be the entire/big part off the backdrop of the story but not necessarily the motivation of the characters or the overall meaning given to the story. Like, a book about the politics of a bunch of organisms living in a frog pond.
I think (in my most humble opinion) that you should begin with picking sides if we want a really clear and usable definition. ^.^ The side that is not chosen should get a name too (if it does not have it already. Up to this point I'd never heard of eco-fiction before).

People keep telling me, as an author, to keep things simple, limit the introduction of new lines of reasoning because readers have a hard time balancing more than 3 points of view in their heads when they are following one character.
Perhaps a very green novel with green scenery and green heroes is so green that most of the greenness gets lost in the reading and your only hope of leaving a positive lasting impression is the moment the story ends, right before the reader picks up another book and proceeds to fill their mind's character buffers with a new set of antagonists.
I usually don't agree with sides, instead I prefer to ransack all sides and build my own understanding of the situation. Right now I am trying to figure out what one would call the intersection of science fiction, eco fiction, and fantasy.
Maybe the concept of learning how to act responsibly automatically goes out the window when people are telling other people what to do, instead of why they are doing it.

It does not have to be limiting. The regency romance is also a very specific genre but still uses the world and type description dynamic.
So what is the usual definition then? World based or motivation/plot based?

I wonder if it might be more useful to discuss critical issues for eco-lit authors such as getting books reviewed and reaching the right audience? How our books are identified is part of that but there are other pressing issues.

If the genre has been around for 40 or so years already, how come it does not seem to have its own clear and recognizable category definition? Or at least, not a mainstream known one.

I think it was mostly science fiction in the 70's, one of the more famous ones was Soylent green.


That's what I mean, famous eco fiction works are famous for something else. Soylent green's catastrophe was the death of the oceans' plankton which was a major source of food. That's when they started eating dead people.
A secondary tag for Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep would be eco-fiction. But it is another case where the eco-fiction tag takes a back seat.
Big bad government is always easier to sell than explaining that the entire framework of a story is based the reactions to a badly treated environment.
There are different kinds of future projections.
One kind substitutes real items we use and situations with items that represent a vast improvement over the current situation. It is simple progress, there is no downside, and the situation that brought about the change was neutral or a bit of inconvenience.
The other type of projection is composed of steps taken to compensate for a crumbling environment, which could be caused by man, natural causes, or a mixture of both. The "improved" designs may not be improvements at all, just dealing with what is available without improving things.
When the reactions are driven by environmental changes, real or imagined, I would say that has a place in eco literature.
I guess the top category is Eco Literature. Normally, the next branch would be non-fiction and fiction. However the fiction tag has already been taken by Virginia's Eco Fiction tag that only encompasses real life.
Jenny would like to have an easy way of avoiding political stories.
I have written an ecology fuel collection of observations that some people have labeled science fiction.
"reaching the right audience" Is that the audience that is already receptive to green ideas or is that the audience that has no idea that no one owns this planet?

I dont know (I'm obviously no expert, just someone with a love for catagories and statistics) but eco-fiction seems such an ungainly catagory. A fast bit of googeling tells me that solarpunk is seen as eco-fiction but steampunk and cyberpunk are not. All three are obvious sci-fi subgenres (with steampunk crossing the line to fantasy in a very few cases, though still being heavy on the clockwork/steam engine technology of its world setting).
The name eco-fiction seems to suggest that the world setting needs an ecosystem. Which most fictional as non fictional worlds have.

Can the story start happy, stay happy, and end happy, or does it need some kind of conflict based on green values?
Inspirational stories are automatically included.
If protagonists use negative values to get the job done is that considered political?

Solarpunk is a term I've only recently come across, but this distinction doesn't surprise me. All three genres have a technological focus, but the purpose of that focus differs for each.
Cyberpunk is typically about futurism and technology for its own sake. There may be the trappings of ecological issues in the worlds of this genre, just as there are in post-apocalyptic or dystopian stories, but the stories are driven by virtual/online/data technologies, while in a generally scifi scenario. Similarly you get Nanopunk and Biopunk, both of which might mesh well with ecological concerns but where the thematic focus is mainly on the tech.
Steampunk gives us retro-futurism as its principle plaything, but it is also often used as a lens for redrawing the sociological roles of the past: there is many a pre-Suffrage heroine casting off the chains of expectation to kick a little patriarchal ass here, and similar critiques of the past's arguable cultural misbehaviour (empire building, European colonialism) often feature.
There are a slew of other punks (I set up a group in Goodreads to discuss them all - it's pretty dead!) that do the same thing for other eras (more or less; I've not read examples of them all, but I think they're treated flexibly by authors): Decopunk (flapping 20s/30s, )Dieselpunk (hot-rodding 40s/50s), Atompunk (cold war 50s/60s). Certainly for the last two eco-themes could be a nice fit, but the fun is mainly generated by mixing up the limited technology with scifi's boundless potentials. And there are more.
The label Stonepunk has also been raised - retroactively applied to things like The Clan of the Cave Bear, though I think that's taking things a bit far. Speaking for myself, I'd like to see Flowerpunk (late-sixties California music scene) and Punkpunk (late-70s UK music scene)... or how about Glampunk, for big-hair-and-Spandex-clad 80s scifi, anyone? ;-)
ANYway, to come full circle: where Solarpunk might diverge from these is that the technology itself is sharply associated with the ecological movement. There's little reason to place the focus on solar power (or geo-thermal, or A, or B, or C new technologies) if there isn't also a thematic motive inherent in the narratives: failure of non-renewable power sources, environmental collapse, etc. So, in SolarpunkI think there is a reasonable expectation of eco-fic where elsewhere in punkfiction there is not.
All that said: the ~punk suffix is meant to be as much about the style of the text as it is about the theme it's attached to. This is why Stonepunk is an ill-fit for me, at least when people want to slot any or all prehistoric fantasy into it, regardless of each book's treatment. By contrast, given the often "outsider", protest-y nature of those who embrace the ecological cause, I'd actually welcome the genre of Ecopunk as a truly appropriate member of the ~punk club.
(time to go and re-post this comment over at my other group!)

I have the same rough idea about the punk suffix as you have :D Its a type of story rather than a setting per-se so steam-punk is the usual setting-storytype combo like historical-romance (also known as the bodice ripper).
Stonepunk is a bit.... well I get why it would technically work but there is no way thats actually getting used to sell anything. It just sounds way to silly XD XD
Robert: Oh, I dunno really but excluding all fantasy and sci-fi might work. I mean, a classmate I discussed naming of genres with this afternoon pointed out to me that the "noir" genre is also a specific combo of both setting and type of story. Though it can be combined with fantasy and/or sci-fi because it is not set firmly in a specific place. Regardless, a noir needs, at its very least, a gritty, dark, world(view), a cynical main character, and some kind of crime to solve, Eco-fiction might work like that maybe? It needs at least a clear idea in the story that the environment matters and a story line that cares (be it good or bad) about it. So it could be political or very personal as long as those two things are present it could be eco-fiction?

Absolutely, and you definitely get examples of steampunk that aren't tied directly into, say, the Victorian era (I was, briefly, published in a series exactly like this); but there is a strong trend towards that kind of theme in period fantasy - the attraction of revising or playing with the associated expectations.
But you're right: narratives set in an actual future in which steam power had become key once more would certainly be considered steampunk. In such a case ecological themes may well be very relevant.

That's a very clear definition of environmentally conscious literature.
Eco-Sci-Fantasy, a science fiction and or fantasy story were the environment is prominently featured and a story line that cares (be it good or bad) about it.
Eco Punk is suppose to be very realistic, about home grown genetic engineering a person can do in their kitchen sink or back yard.
Steampunk has successfully branched out into other markets, mostly jewelry, costumes, and paraphernalia. There are also numerous Steampunk festivals and conventions all year long.
I was reading about Solar Punk through a link in Eco-Fiction.com. The thrust of the comment was that solar punk was uncensored, personal, and, in my opinion, a place where the outer reaches of the technological plains of the old empire have become the center of a new one.

I'm reading all your comments and loving it. Reads like fresh powder to me. New tracks? Maybe.

Well, here it is over 40 years later and though the term is not used as much anymore, I was trying to find a label to describe the books I wanted to archive and talk about that are eco-minded. I had been calling my site clifibooks.com, because I had written a novel about climate change and no one place on the web was really covering these books. However, soon I realized that climate fiction was not the umbrella I wanted. I wanted to curate a huge sampling of literature that was related to the way we connect with nature, and systemically, climate change is just one (though a huge) result of that--the means to get there involves so many other issues like greed, environmental destruction, polluting the land and air and water, deforestation, etc. I wanted to cover the big picture, though climate change novels are getting more popular and make up a big part of the site and are a *part* of the picture. A colleague Claude Nougat once said that there are downstream/upstream effects to climate change, and she was definitely right-on. And those other factors are more inline with eco-fiction overall.
Eco-fiction was the only term that really made sense to me as I searched for a new domain name, especially after reading that it could cover both human-oriented and nature (non-human) oriented subject material. That made "eco-fiction" the umbrella I was looking for, even though it may not be a true publishing label. Even though eco-fiction can be called a genre, or even a composite subgenre, it seems pretty broad, and Dwyer said it does cover speculative fiction (like science fiction and fantasy) that meet the other ecologically minded themes.
So to me, eco-fiction is a good descriptor of this literature, but unfortunately may not always be considered a genre via bookstores and book distributors. I use it at Moon Willow Press (the nice thing eco-fiction has going for it is that it's easily recognizable at least), and I know that Ashland Creek Press, EcoLit Books, Green Writers Press, Harvard Square Editions, and other niche presses also use the term. I've seen libraries and CanLit use it as well as organizations like ASLE. Occasionally you'll see the word pop up at places like Grist or The Guardian. I think academics may use it more than those trying to push popular genres, but, to me, I think it's perfect as a description in the very least.
I like the idea of fleshing out genre meanings, though, but, for those interested in eco-fiction, and--not saying that this term is static and cannot evolve--it had a lot of attention in the 1970s and volumes were written about it, including that entire book mentioned above. So there's plenty out there, definition-wise, to spring from.
Another interesting book that I'm now reading, called "Eco-fiction," edited by John Stadler (now out of print, published also in the 1970s), is a collection of short stories, mostly science-fiction--with authors like Edgar Allen Poe, Ray Bradbury, Kurt Vonnegut Jr., John Steinbeck, JG Ballard, Isaac Asimov, and more. It's so great. Some of the stories were published 2-3 decades before this collection. It's interesting to see that really took off in the 1970s, a similar timeline as the growing environmental movement, the back-to-the-land movement, etc.
But I would argue we have had eco-fiction forever, and that there's hardly anything new why writers address ecological subjects. From Gilgamesh and the Bible to Tolkien to Edward Abbey to very early science fiction writers, eco-fiction has a rich lineage. There is a different ideology you'll see in authors today who nature-write; whereas nature used to be seen more as a divine offering and place of solitude, it may be more seen now as a non-divine one. The topics (fire, deluge, etc.) change along the way as we create new myths and reflect new realities--but the bent has always been there. Now that we are facing a huge climate crisis, writers may be getting even more jittery and it is showing. Climate change is becoming a very popular subject among authors today trying to imagine it, or write how it already has affected the world--in both fiction and nonfiction.
But now we are here today, and eco-fiction is all but forgotten except in a few literary circles that still talk about it. It's good to see interest in it here. I will note, as a publisher and one who works through Ingram, one of the largest book distributors in the world, we are hard-pressed to be able to find any environmental category for books whatsoever unless it is nonfiction or juvenile fiction. I joke: what, when we grow up we lose our interest in environmental fiction? There is no category for that currently, not even at a broad level like eco-fiction, nature fiction, environmental fiction. Zilch. Maybe it's because our stories, though eco-minded, are also romances, mysteries, thrillers, fantasy, science fiction, crime-detective, etc., and these genres are more easily marketable and familiar. Maybe also, it has been argued, that terming a genre based upon something that might be morally or politically "teaching" is potentially dangerous and may be a turn-off from the get-go. Publishers and marketers don't like to take risks unless there's potentially a good payoff.
That brings me to my final point: solarpunk. This is an evolving genre that is verrrrry grassroots, coming from multiple points of origin and spreading out just as diversely. The solar part of it speaks to the genre as being somewhat tech-based in that we want to see renewable energy in the future and that's part of what it's about--a cleaner, more sustainable world. But the punk suffix means that to get there, we have to work against the machine that is all about fossil fuels. It's status quo, the same one that still doesn't even recognize ecological works in fiction as a book category/genre. I am in love with the concept of solarpunk. Not only does it seem to be like a fairly new genre (some say authors like Kim Stanley Robinson and Ursula le Guin have written with the solarpunk concept, before the label), but it is a movement that is hands-on, artistic, solutions-based, and so on--one in which not only authors may participate in but also other artists building the future we want: engineers, scientists, architects, fashion designers.


They are about the impact that climate change could have on the world - how nature takes over, how people cope with pre-industrilised living but it is more about re-building and the effects of human love, compassion and friendship.
'tis a shame there is no genre pigeon hole for us:(


Given that we have his field guide from someone who read hundreds (maybe thousands) of books and put a lot of time into the research of this field, I feel we can go by it to come to understand what ecofiction is. Charlene has posted some of the main ideas here, from my site.
Regarding ecofiction in other worlds, the book states:
"Ideally, the landscape and ecosystems--whether fantasy or real--should be as 'realistic' as possible and plot constraints should accord with ecological principles. It should be noted that magic realism and speculative fiction, however, frequently employ fantastic elements to provide readers with a different perspective on the nature of reality itself, as in Kim Stanley Robinson's Three Californias or Mars trilogies."
For the above reason, and because older ecofiction has included both science fiction and fantasy worlds that aren't our planet, I believe these works are traditionally seen as ecofiction.
I'd like to note too that ecofiction may overlap with, coincide with, or even broadly cover other genres such as dystopian literature. I think it's helpful to see it as more open-ended and evolving than closed or a category within itself.
As for trying to pin down "ecofiction" as a modern day hashtag, a buzzword, a publishing category recognized by many, I think it's tough to do that. The term is from academic study on books emerging in the 1970s that were ecological in nature (though much literature beforehand paved the way), so I think it's more of an academic/literary/ecocriticism descriptor than a publisher's or marketer's one. However, it seems that modern day marketers/publishers have used it, such as Ashland Creek Press and the article Charlene linked above. Libraries and colleges are more likely to use this taxonomy than news media and commercial publishers. However, my own site has been listed in Wired and The Guardian, so it's not like ecofiction is so old it's not recognized--it totally is, but I think really in our day of hashtags and buzzwords, it is not a trending or transitory term. It's a composite genre that is very holistic and includes other genres such as science fiction, fantasy, other speculative fiction, political fiction, literary fiction, etc.
I personally like the term ecofiction because it's self-explanatory at a superficial level and is a good umbrella for the types of novels I want to explore on my site. I could have gone with environmental fiction (same thing) or eco-lit/nature writing, but eco-fiction was shorter and is more inclusive of fiction than nonfiction; eco-literature and nature writing is often more related to nonfiction, and I really wanted to look mostly at fiction. It just came down to the domain name. I did think about nature fiction too, but eco-fiction is a short name and already established.
I also think that established terms are perfectly fine, and when they also cover newer ideas, like climate change in fiction for instance, I'd prefer to use a long-established description that hasn't gone anywhere in half a century, whereas newer terms have the potential to fade out.
But labels are just labels, and the work itself is, to me, what is so interesting. I recently interviewed Jeff VanderMeer (http://eco-fiction.com/interview-with...), whose Southern Reach trilogy's first book, ANNIHILATION, is being made into a movie next year, starring some pretty popular actors like Oscar Isaac of Star Wars, Jennifer Jason Leigh, and Natalie Portman. Jeff really likes the term "weird fiction," which is one way to deal with ecology in fiction. My interview with him goes into this in more detail, but to me it's just another exciting newer kind of approach when dealing with environmental destruction. Note that weird fiction is not a new term. I think it came around in the 1930s, re-emerged in the 1980s, and in the modern sense is being tied with some other ideas like hyperobjects (climate change being one) and dark ecology. Anyway, I'm derailing slightly, but while labels are exciting, reading Southern Reach really kind of blew my mind and opened me up to a whole new ideas involved in storytelling when it comes to environmental issues.



Here is simply where fiction may depart from reality, which it often does. While I completely agree with you about the importance of understanding the reality of our world, fiction has the permission to take that knowledge and imagine other worlds with it. Writers do not need to be scientists to warn/imagine a climate-changed world; we simply need to know the basics and go from there.
While eco-fiction traditionally accepts speculative fiction, modern authors leading the way in stories with parables about the importance of the environment are often doing so with magic realism and fantasy--including Margaret Atwood, Jeff VanderMeer (with his weird fiction), and so on. Eco-fiction that depicts actual reality is simply another type of eco-fiction--usually contemporary, perhaps realism/naturalism. This is what I meant by the scope of eco-fiction being quite broad. I don't believe we should exclude the broad types of fiction already accepted into the canon of eco-fiction as it has existed for the past half-century, nor the newer authors leading the way--as are defined in the media as well (Vandermeer, for instance, according to The New Yorker, is "The Weird Thoreau.")


I like that very concise explanation :)

I disagree completely and we will just have to agree to disagree. I stick to my strong assertion that eco-fiction creates fiction around the real earth, our earth, in all its fading accuracy. Fiction stores that make up nature belong in fantasy or science fiction, period. I will not be changing my mind, ever.
Now can someone help me with the lady and the frogs in the store?

People want ecological stories to tell others how things are going wrong or right, while all the time, that same theme has been brought down through time dressed in different clothing but it is the same behavior we are all talking about.
By insisting that everything is based on exact meanings, individual situations, little cutouts of the big picture and not be transferred to one common situation we will have history repeating itself as the main prerequisite for going forward. United we stand, divided we fall.

if genres are being blended it must say so in the title such as 'urban fantasy' the reader then knows what to expect and settle down to enjoy? the tale.
But then maybe I'm too old now to appreciate eco lit with fantasy worlds - I do feel though it is an important genre and should be taken seriously, to fantasize it is to water now the seriousness of Earths plight. If the reader cannot at the end of book say 'what the hell?' then we are failing.

You remind me about the woman and the frog I mention above. I don't understand. I really don't. How can one want frogs on a card, clothing, etc., but not care about frogs in the real world (entire taxon is going extinct) which HAS to get political if we are to "save ourselves" inherently meaning, save our own planet. Is it recreational then for some people and whether the environment is destroyed or not is just not important? I really don't understand.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Big Melt (other topics)Mercedes Wore Black (other topics)
The Big Melt (other topics)
Clockwork Angel; Clockwork Prince; Clockwork Princess (other topics)
The Clan of the Cave Bear (other topics)
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I think part of the problem with Eco-fiction is the lack of a concrete (sorry) definition.
I offer a definition of Eco-fiction:
Fiction whose major underlying theme is nature on earth; the plot is based on, incorporates, explores how this state of nature is affected, for better or worse. Nature is the main or a major component of the story.
What do you think?