Solar, Hope, Cosy, and Functional
I am excited about how many people have embraced solarpunk! I feel great that people are imagining the means to a better future! I am equally excited by the growth of hopepunk. We need to stay strong in our visions of a bright future.
I am bringing “cosy” and “functional” into my work, because it is easy to think stories must have grand spectacles and nearly insurmountable conflict to be interesting. Many movements for change may have had notable moments, but most of the heavy work was done on a persistent everyday manner.
Rosa Parks deliberately sat in a seat reserved for white people on a bus. She did not come riding a horse up to the steps of Congress, swinging a magic sword over her head. She was not a “chosen one”. She did not carry laser pistols. And yet that moment captured people’s imaginations. Suddenly, we all understand that we can have a part in creating change.
Portraying genuinely good friendships that help sustain us while we do the work for change is not only cosy and functional, but can prove pivotal in making our world one of kindness, security, and a healthy environment. So many new and important things can be said through the arts. They need to come from our experience of what is good, and true, and compassionate.
Keep up your awesome efforts!
(from a Tumblr post)
#solarpunk #hopepunk #cosycore #funkyfi #environment #humanrights
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Andrew Pam, Jay Bryant, Guy Geens, Kenny Chaffin, Bob Lai and Clarice Boomshakala Bouvier like this.
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Bob Lai
in reply to Muse • • •I rather wish television shows would stop with the dystopian green color balance. It's not edgy or novel, it's tired and trite.
And, for those of us who have worked in television, it's simply wrong. We'd get called on the carpet for submitting green- or blue- tinged video.