Every summer has become, for me, a window on a train thatโ€™s rushing toward a collapsed bridge. Everyone should be on one side of the air-conditioned carsโ€”the side with windows that view the approaching void. Everyone will die real soon. But almost everyone is preoccupied with a phone, or a game of cards, or some food from the bistro car.ย 

This train is, of course, our consumer-driven society; and the destroyed bridge ahead is, of course, the catastrophe of climate change. The summers keep getting longer and hotter, and extreme weather events are becoming more and more costly and deadly. Who will rescue us?ย 

Shortly before World War II, the German philosopher Walter Benjamin, who inspired my image of the doomed train, wrote in a note he did not live to publish (he chose suicide over capture by the Nazis): โ€œIt is possible that revolutions are, for those of humanity who travel in [the] train [of world history], the act of pulling the emergency brake.โ€ As it was then, it is now. Our only hope is the radical transformation of our society, but all we can do is wait until itโ€™s too late. What happens after the end of the world thatโ€™s about to happen? The answer is found in a 1993 novel by Octavia Butler, Parable of the Sower.

We enter the year 2024. The American economy has been destroyed by rising sea levels, heat waves, violent storms, crop failure, and water shortages. โ€œTornadoes are smashing hell out of Alabama, Kentucky, Tennessee, and two or three other states,โ€ says Lauren Oya Olamina, the Black teenage narrator of Sower, to her friend Joanne. โ€œThree hundred people dead so far. And thereโ€™s a blizzard freezing the northern midwest, killing even more people.โ€ย 

As for this: โ€œAccording to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Tennessee has endured at least 205 twisters since the start of 2020 (the statistics have not been updated yet in 2024). The memories of deadly storms in March 2020 and December 2023 still seem too fresh.โ€ Thatโ€™s from a real article, โ€œDeadly tornadoes again rampage through Tennessee: โ€˜Lord please donโ€™t let me die,โ€™โ€ that The Tennessean ran on May 9, 2024.

Our world and the fictional one in Sower are very close for a good reason: the novelโ€™s author fully absorbed the climate science available at the end of the 20th century. Butler, in an interview presented at the end of the Kindle Edition of Parable of the Sower, said:

[For my research] I looked at global warming and the ways in which itโ€™s likely to change things for us. Thereโ€™s food-price driven inflation thatโ€™s likely because, as the climate changes, some of the foods weโ€™re used to wonโ€™t grow as well in the places weโ€™re used to growing them. Not only will temperatures be too high, not only will there not be enough water, but the increase in carbon dioxide wonโ€™t affect all plants in the same ways. Some will grow a little faster while their weeds grow a lot faster. Some will grow faster but not be as nutritiousโ€”forcing both their beasts and us to need more to be decently nourished. Itโ€™s a much more complex problem than a simple increase in temperature.ย 

Butlerโ€™s brilliant literary imagination augmented this reality (or scientific knowledge) with descriptions of the cultural impact of the coming anthropogenic disaster. In Sowerโ€™s 2024, most Americans are โ€œilliterate, jobless, homeless, without decent sanitation or clean water.โ€ A few Americans, who are lucky enough to work, live in gated communities that can barely keep out thieves and fire-mad junkies. Law and order (meaning the police and other civil services) are only for the very rich.ย 

And this is whatโ€™s truly terrifying about Parable of the Sower: The economic system that caused the catastrophe, that killed millions (if not billions) with its eternal drive for surplus value, still persists. Money has not lost its social power. Land is bought and sold. Life insurance policies are marketed. Indeed, capitalism has reverted to its older forms (collectively called primitive accumulation by trad-Marxists). Robber barons are back with a vengeance, and so are company towns (โ€œI owe my soul to the company storeโ€). And in the 2030s, the setting for the second novel, Parable of the Talents (of a trilogy Butler didnโ€™t live long enough to complete, as she died in 2006 at the age of 58), even slavery is reanimated.

Capitalismโ€™s grip on power in Sowerโ€™s post-apocalyptic dystopia is maintained by corporations based around the world and authoritarian American presidents who promise to revive the good old days. (The campaign slogan for the presidential candidate in Parable of the Talents, which was published in 1998, is โ€œMake America Great Again.โ€) Capitalism also relies on Christofascism (โ€œOklahoma schools are required to teach the Bible,โ€ Washington Post, June 27, 2024), racism (โ€œNewsmax guest lobs a racist slur at Rep. Jamaal Bowman,โ€ Media Matters, June 27, 2024), and the institutionalization of corruption (โ€œThe US supreme court just basically legalized bribery,โ€ The Guardian, June 27, 2024).

The only ray of hope in this super-dark world is a new religion, Earthseed, that has Lauren Oya Olamina as its founder. For her, God can only be change.ย 

Lauren to her friend Joanne:

โ€œDid you ever read about bubonic plague in medieval Europe?โ€ I asked. [Joanne] nodded. She reads a lot the way I do, reads all kinds of things. โ€œA lot of the continent was depopulated,โ€ she said. โ€œSome survivors thought the world was coming to an end… Whatโ€™s your point?โ€ โ€œThe changes.โ€ I thought for a moment. โ€œThey were slow changes compared to anything that might happen here, but it took a plague to make some of the people realize that things could change.โ€

In this theology of change, we hear not so much the echoes of the pre-Socratic Greek philosopher Heraclitus: โ€œNo one ever steps in the same river twice, for itโ€™s not the same river and the person is not the same person.โ€ More important, and this reading is supported by Butlerโ€™s obvious observance of genetic change, are the echoes with the thinking of evolutionary biologist James A. Shapiro. His 2011 book, Evolution: A View from the 21st Century, contains a chapter titled โ€œCan Genomic Changes Be Linked to Ecological Disruptions?โ€ that sounds just like Butler. Her prophetโ€™s theology (and warning to humankind) is written all over these words by Shapiro: โ€œ…little attention has been paid to the relationship between ecological disruption and genetic change. The influence that stimulus-sensitive regulatory processes and changes in population structure may have on the processes of genome restructuring requires greater scrutiny.โ€

By way of a religion, Earthseed, thatโ€™s truly pro-life, the humans in the last pages of Butlerโ€™s novel are finally ready to undergo the kind of radical cultural change thatโ€™s desperately needed in the train described at the opening of this article. Welcome to how our only world ends. It will be like this every summer: getting worse, and worse, and worse until thereโ€™s nothing worse left.ย 

โ€œIs it just my imagination, or does the Puget Sound region have fewer days with marine clouds than we had years ago?โ€ โ€“My Northwest, June 26. Read all about it in Parable of the Sower.

Charles Mudede—who writes about film, books, music, and his life in Rhodesia, Zimbabwe, the USA, and the UK for The Stranger—was born near a steel plant in Kwe Kwe, Zimbabwe. He has no memory...

2 replies on “Octavia Butler Saw Our Doom”

  1. Youโ€™ve made me want to read the book. Anyone know why spl has 3 different ebooks of it, 2 with 8 weeksโ€™ wait and 1 with 17 weeksโ€™ wait?

Comments are closed.