Climate Change, Interrupted: Representation And... May 2026

"We are told the world is ending," Elara said, "but people just keep living as if it isn't."

Elara grew up in a world of "Before" and "After." The textbooks at the University of California, Davis , where she studied environmental humanities, spoke of climate change as a straight line—a fuse lit in the Victorian era that was now reaching the powder keg. Everything was framed by deadlines: "Twelve years to act," "Net zero by 2050". Climate Change, Interrupted: Representation and...

One afternoon, Elara sat by the river with an elder from the local Coahuiltecan community . She complained about the "stalled debates" and the "denial" she saw in the news. "We are told the world is ending," Elara

But Elara lived in a coastal neighborhood where time didn't feel like a fuse. It felt like an interruption. She complained about the "stalled debates" and the

Every few months, the high tide would "interrupt" the morning commute, turning Main Street into a shallow canal. The neighbors didn't scream or flee like in the disaster movies Elara saw on Netflix; they simply paused. They waited for the water to recede, then went back to painting their porches or walking their dogs. It was a slow, attritional crisis—what scholar Rob Nixon called "slow violence".

The elder didn't look at a clock. He looked at the water. "The story you are telling is too fast," he said. "You think the end is a single moment. But for my people, the end of the world happened hundreds of years ago with the first dispossession of our lands. We have been living in the 'after' for a long time."