Deep Ecology Gone Wrong: J.-C. Rufin’s Globalia and Le Parfum d’Adam
Deep Ecology Gone Wrong: J.-C. Rufin’s Globalia and Le Parfum d’Adam
In Globalia and Le Parfum d’Adam J.-C. Rufin explores what could go wrong with the environmentalist movement, if it were co-opted by unwise or greedy leaders. Globalia is the sole country in a dystopian world governed according to the principles of deep ecology: vegetarianism, strict protection of forests and animals, and zero population growth. It is a sterile, climate-controlled world, covered by domes. “Non-zones” outside the domes are homes to mobsters, warring tribes, and resistants. They constitute a feared outside enemy which serves to unite most Globalians in support of their totalitarian government. This novel echoes Alexis de Tocqueville’s fear that a “tyranny of the majority” might someday rule the United States. Le Parfum d’Adam is a thriller about ecoterrorists who, obsessed by the deep ecology principle that world population must decrease, plot to contaminate the water system of a huge favela of Rio de Janeiro. They believe that poor people—too busy surviving to think about ecology—are destroying the planet.
Keywords: Jean-Christophe Rufin, Globalia, Le Parfum d’Adam, La Dictature libérale, rust, material ecocriticism, Catherine Larrère, Alexis de Tocqueville, ecoterrorism, deep ecology
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