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“A Vessel Larger Than Reality to Hold”: Water Crisis and Indian Speculative Climate Fiction Cover

“A Vessel Larger Than Reality to Hold”: Water Crisis and Indian Speculative Climate Fiction

Open Access
|Dec 2025

Abstract

The Anthropocene, today, has gained significant momentum in ongoing environmental, socio-political, and economic discourses. It has revitalised ecocriticism and environmental writing, and has, thus, shaped the social imagination. The effects of this can be seen increasingly in the production and prominence of climate fiction worldwide in recent years. In India, the genre of climate fiction is also growing rapidly. This article critically engages with the emerging genre of speculative climate fiction in India. It discusses three Indian works of speculative climate fiction: Prayaag Akbar’s Leila (2017), Varun Thomas Mathew’s The Black Dwarves of the Good Little Bay (2019), and Veena Nagpal’s Radius 200 (2014). It investigates how the texts weave their narratives around the issue of water crisis and their visions of dystopian and post-apocalyptic worlds through climate catastrophe. While situating the speculative fiction from India as part of the larger canon of climate fiction, this article also categorises its distinctive features. It does so by entering in conversation with the ongoing scholarly debate on climate fiction’s most effective mode of representation – the speculative vs realism debate. In conclusion, the article argues that Indian speculative climate fiction achieves greater effectiveness in dealing with the climate crisis by representing the ‘futuristic climate-changed worlds’ not as a rupture from the present but as a continuation of the ongoing crisis on the ground.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/ewcp-2025-0017 | Journal eISSN: 2067-5712 | Journal ISSN: 1583-6401
Language: English
Page range: 129 - 145
Published on: Dec 23, 2025
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 2 issues per year

© 2025 Manoj Rajbanshi, Nagendra Kumar, published by Lucian Blaga University of Sibiu
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.