Abstract

ABSTRACT In this article, I am going to trace ‘trails of erasure’ in two contemporary novels that introduce a wider trend in climate fiction: Firstly, both Barbara Kingsolver’s Flight Behaviour (2012) and Charlotte McConaghy’s Migrations (2020) indicate a tendency to envision temporalities that render climate threats more imminent and, secondly, both novels imagine spatialities that align human and non-human forms of migration. Thus, they closely connect human and non-human ways of coping with climate change, which may be considered a form of deep adaptation to our current climate crisis. However, they not only challenge but also reinscribe problematic gender and class discourses in the process.

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