Year 24 No. 2 (2016): Issue 2/2016
Articles

An Air-conditioned Global Warming: The Description of Settings in Ian McEwan’s Solar

Published 12/10/2016

Keywords

  • environment,
  • places,
  • Solar,
  • ecocriticism,
  • Ian McEwan

How to Cite

Bolchi, E. . (2016). An Air-conditioned Global Warming: The Description of Settings in Ian McEwan’s Solar. L’Analisi Linguistica E Letteraria, 24(2), 35–42. Retrieved from https://www.analisilinguisticaeletteraria.eu/index.php/ojs/article/view/211

Abstract

The three main settings of McEwan’s Solar, a novel described as “the first great global-warming novel” (Walsh 2010) are significant: from London, to the Artic Pole, up to the desert in New Mexico, these places are all described through the interior monologue of the anti-hero Michael Beard, a character allegorical of humanity’s greed for selfish over-consumption. As Beard moves in the real environment only through the non-places of supermodernity (Augé), the paper analyses the descriptions of settings to underline how McEwan uses them to write about climatechange in a new “novelistic” way (McEwan).