One of the things I do for a living is facilitate the learning about
current affairs through book discussion (mostly novels, but I do
manage to sneak in texts when I can). So, I read a lot of fiction and
made my way to Michael Crighton's State of Fear recently. The best
part of his book is the afterword, where he talks about the
politicians, lawyers and media creating "a state of fear," wherein we
have to have at least one big crisis going on. Now, let me make it
clear that I walk in art and science worlds (politics and media, too)
and when I read this afterword, it struck me as being truth.
I think what we see in the world with the current environmental
crisis -- as well as others -- is that creation of fear, wherein a
mainstream public buys into the crisis du jour and mostly forgets
about it as soon as the press drops the story for something sexier.
Trouble with this is, we have serious issues that get little, if any,
play until a real crisis shows up ... New Orleans is a great example,
the bird flu is another.
Why I am waxing prosaic on this herein is because your dialogue on
"fictions" spurred me too think about the positive use of "fiction"
as a learning tool and about the fiction of the PLM, I think that is
what Crighton called it.