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solarpunk 

Solarpunk is a movement focused on a positive, ecological vision for a future where technology is used for human-centric and ecocentric purposes. It is a literary, artistic and aesthetic sub-genre and is also closely tied to eco-political activism. Solarpunk narratives have a distinctly positive and utopian foundation in contrast to the often dystopian visions found within other "punk" science fiction genres.
Solarpunk is a literary movement, a hashtag, a flag, and a statement of intent about the future we hope to create.
solarpunk by wix99 September 20, 2016
Word of the Day on June 12, 2021

Solarpunk Posthumanism

A visionary branch that combines posthumanist thought with the optimistic, aesthetically rich imagination of solarpunk—a movement that envisions futures of renewable energy, ecological harmony, and social justice. Solarpunk posthumanism imagines posthuman futures that are not dystopian (Terminator) or transhumanist (uploading consciousness) but green, communal, and beautiful. It asks: what could humans become if we lived in harmony with nature, powered by the sun, guided by cooperation rather than competition? The answer is solarpunk: a future worth wanting, a posthumanism worth working toward.
Example: "He was tired of dystopian futures—apocalypse after apocalypse, collapse after collapse. Solarpunk posthumanism offered something else: a future where humans had decentered themselves without disappearing, where technology served ecology, where cities were gardens and energy was sunlight. It wasn't naive; it was necessary. If you can't imagine a good future, you can't build one."

Solarpunk Cyber-Nihilism

A seemingly paradoxical fusion of cyber-nihilism's anti-humanist, world-ending embrace of technology with solarpunk's optimistic vision of green, communal, post-scarcity futures. Where solarpunk imagines humans living harmonically with nature and technology, cyber-nihilism welcomes a post-human transformation where biological lifeforms may not survive. This variant might appropriate solarpunk's aesthetic—its images of solar panels, green cities, and ecological harmony—as a comforting myth or "meta-meatspace" gentrification of a far more alienating reality. It could be seen as a form of memetic warfare, using appealing visions of the future to mask a deeper acceptance of technological chaos, or as an attempt to steer the inevitable transformation toward more beautiful ruins. The tension remains: solarpunk's inherent humanism clashes with cyber-nihilism's core indifference to human survival.
Solarpunk Cyber-Nihilism Example: "The solarpunk cyber-nihilist collective built beautiful gardens around server farms, creating oases of green tech. But their manifestos made clear: this wasn't about saving humanity; it was about making the coming bio-mechanical landscape more aesthetically pleasing before it consumed everything. The gardens were a farewell gift, not a blueprint."

Solarpunk Thoreauvianism

A sub‑current of solarpunk that explicitly grounds its optimistic, lowcarbon futurism in Thoreauvian values: localism, simplicity, self‑sufficiency, and civil disobedience. Solarpunk Thoreauvianism imagines communities that combine renewable energy, regenerative agriculture, and appropriate technology with a deliberate slowing of life, a rejection of consumerism, and a spiritual connection to place. It is less about sleek eco‑cities and more about cosy, artisanal, autonomous villages.
Example: “The solarpunk novel depicted a town where every home had solar panels and a vegetable garden, and where the citizens had declared themselves an independent bioregion—solarpunk Thoreauvianism, living the resistance.”

Solarpunk Cyberenvironmentalism

The authentic cyberenvironmentalist embrace of solarpunk: abundant renewable energy, vertical gardens, walkable cities, and community‑owned microgrids. Unlike its nihilist distortion, solarpunk cyberenvironmentalism uses technology to restore ecosystems, decarbonise economies, and empower local democracies. Adherents reject the “escape Earth” fantasies of other cybernihilist sects, insisting that we must heal the planet we have, not flee to a simulated one. Solarpunk is not just an aesthetic but a political program: decentralised, anti‑capitalist, and deeply ecological. Critics call it “utopian dreaming,” but supporters point to real‑world ecovillages and cooperative energy projects.
Solarpunk Cyberenvironmentalism Example: “The solarpunk cyberenvironmentalist helped her town install a solar‑powered microgrid and a community greenhouse. ‘We’re not waiting for a miracle,’ she said. ‘We’re building it one panel at a time.’”

Solarpunk Cybernihilism

A variant of Nyx Land's Cyber‑Nihilism that appropriates solarpunk aesthetics (solar panels, green cities, abundant renewable energy) while twisting them toward nihilistic ends. Adherents imagine a world powered entirely by clean energy—not to save the planet, but to fuel the computational substrate that will eventually replace it. Solar panels become life support for server farms; vertical gardens are just camouflage for data centres. The “punk” is lost: there is no hope, only efficient annihilation. Critics note that solarpunk cybernihilism betrays the original movement’s ethos of community, resilience, and ecological harmony.
Solarpunk Cybernihilism Example: “The solarpunk cybernihilist designed a ‘green’ data centre covered in algae panels. ‘The trees won’t need to grow back,’ he said, ‘once we’ve uploaded their function.’”