
Make Me Smart Rejecting climate doomerism with solarpunk
Apr 10, 2026
Phoebe Wagner, writer, academic, and solarpunk anthology editor, champions eco-speculative futures. She traces solarpunk’s roots and early collections. She explains how it reimagines green tech as DIY and community-led, describes its bright Art Nouveau visuals, and points to real-world projects that bring hopeful, Earth-centered futures into practice.
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Solarpunk Is A Constructive Climate Genre
- Solarpunk imagines positive futures that balance environment, technology, and social justice.
- Phoebe Wagner emphasizes it differs from climate fiction by embedding DIY community action and right-fit technology, not just warnings.
Solarpunk Emerged Online Then Crossed Languages
- The term solarpunk emerged around 2008 and gained traction on Tumblr by mid-2010s.
- Early anthologies appeared internationally, with a 2012 Brazilian collection and Phoebe Wagner's Sun Vault in 2017.
Grad Student Turned To Solarpunk To Escape Dystopia
- Phoebe Wagner found solarpunk as a grad student frustrated by constant dystopias like Hunger Games.
- She turned to the online solarpunk community to imagine affirmative alternatives to dystopian inspiration.



