Retropunk

a cubist painting of a steampunk submarine

A few weeks ago I made a very lame Australian political joke about steampunk submarines. It’s not worth repeating. But it reminded me about how hopeful I was just over a decade ago regarding steampunk exploding onto the fiction scene. It never happened.

And I started thinking about why not, and timing, and how times of crisis change our fiction consumption, and how mythology is more powerful than history.

Which led me to a new prediction.

::insert drum roll::

Retropunk.

Sadly, I think the chance of steampunk becoming more than a niche subgenre has passed. However, retropunk, which reimagines the past and the future, while critiquing the present, and without being limited to steam engines and Queen Victoria being all “we are not amused”, is really well-positioned to claim attention.

Whatever world we wish we had, retropunk can inhabit it. Retropunk can push us forward to a future of delirious disintegration or of flourishing space colonies. It can be anything, but whatever it is will be framed by nostalgia. That nostalgia provides the stepping stones, ones that steampunk lacked, to bring the popular imagination along with it.

[If you’re curious about my steampunk adventures, I recommend The Icarus Plot for a traditional London setting and Clockwork Gold for an Australian version.]


Discover more from Caldryn Parliament

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Comments

4 responses to “Retropunk”

  1. Carrie W Avatar
    Carrie W

    I love steampunk as a look (check out the very, very underrated HBO show The Nevers for a great example), but it almost never works for me in book form. I feel like that’s because the description generally ends up being a slog to get through. It’s the same reason that I love sci-fi but have to be in the right mood for “hard” sci-fi. As a visual style, steampunk is glorious, but reading through pages and pages of description to paint the picture generally stalls me out.

    It wasn’t always that way, but the pace of the world has blitzed forward so much that I feel like my attention-span has gotten much shorter.

    Retropunk also feels very cool visually – imo, I’d label Firefly as retropunk, and Altered Carbon (Netflix series). Westworld (HBO series) does it too, in a fun way. In books, maybe… Ready Player One? I think it has an advantage over steampunk when it comes to descriptive slog, because it can lean on pop-culture shorthand – even people born way after Star Wars (1977) are familiar with “Luke, I am your father” because it has become so ingrained in pop-culture, which means you don’t need a lot of description to make a Star Wars nod land.

    I have always imagined that in 300 years, our space-faring civilization will be pretty retropunk, carrying the bits of our shared history with us out into the stars, as cultural cornerstones that help us hold onto our shared identity as Earthlings. There’s something wonderful about the image.

    1. Jenny Schwartz Avatar

      The Nevers is now on my list! Thank you 😀 I enjoy your insights so much. The speed thing is so real. Your last paragraph feels like a future truth. Hopeful.

  2. Deborah Furness Avatar
    Deborah Furness

    As always, really enjoy reading and pondering your newsletter! Have you read any of Shelley Adina’s Lady Georgia Brunel steampunk stories? Worth checking out. Also, love Meljean Brooks steampunk novels.

    1. Jenny Schwartz Avatar

      Ooh! Great memories 😀 I hadn’t thought of The Iron Duke in ages. Meljean’s twist on the sugar trade was awesome. That’s why steampunk deserves a bigger audience – audacious engagement with our history.

Leave a Reply