Mikkel Krause Frantzen
@mikkelkfrantzen.bsky.social
Assoc. Prof. at UCPH, literary critic at Politiken, author of Going Nowhere, Slow & Klodens fald & Slutspil & (soon) The Birth of the Financial Thriller & (later, at one point) The Climate Endgame
Mail: mikkelfrantzen@hum.ku.dk
Mail: mikkelfrantzen@hum.ku.dk
Why have I never worn Teva before / why am I really this old ?
November 11, 2025 at 2:42 PM
Why have I never worn Teva before / why am I really this old ?
Reposted by Mikkel Krause Frantzen
For the latest episode of @the-breakdown.bsky.social podcast (we're back!), I spoke to @sabrinafernandes.bsky.social about Brazilian ecological politics, developmentalism and her essay "Lula's Dilemma"
Listen below / wherever you get your podcasts 🌳🍃
www.break-down.org/lulas-dilemm...
Listen below / wherever you get your podcasts 🌳🍃
www.break-down.org/lulas-dilemm...
Lula’s Dilemmas and COP30
Adrienne speaks to Sabrina Fernandes about the complexities of Brazilian ecological politics at the start of the COP30 climate conference.
www.break-down.org
November 11, 2025 at 11:14 AM
For the latest episode of @the-breakdown.bsky.social podcast (we're back!), I spoke to @sabrinafernandes.bsky.social about Brazilian ecological politics, developmentalism and her essay "Lula's Dilemma"
Listen below / wherever you get your podcasts 🌳🍃
www.break-down.org/lulas-dilemm...
Listen below / wherever you get your podcasts 🌳🍃
www.break-down.org/lulas-dilemm...
Reposted by Mikkel Krause Frantzen
Ever wondered why there is no accessible book-length introduction to ecological economics and the political economy of transitions in Danish?
I know I have, so I tried to write one. It is out tomorrow, asking how we analytically should approach whether it is too little, too late and who benefits.
I know I have, so I tried to write one. It is out tomorrow, asking how we analytically should approach whether it is too little, too late and who benefits.
November 11, 2025 at 9:38 AM
Ever wondered why there is no accessible book-length introduction to ecological economics and the political economy of transitions in Danish?
I know I have, so I tried to write one. It is out tomorrow, asking how we analytically should approach whether it is too little, too late and who benefits.
I know I have, so I tried to write one. It is out tomorrow, asking how we analytically should approach whether it is too little, too late and who benefits.
Reposted by Mikkel Krause Frantzen
"Denial is not an idiosyncracy or private pathology, but a certificate of membership in this particular society, a kind of credit card necessary for moving around in it and accessing its commodities and living without going nuts"
- Prof. Andreas Malm
youtu.be/fVYO7w6UHi8
- Prof. Andreas Malm
youtu.be/fVYO7w6UHi8
Andreas Malm's Public Lecture, October 10, 2025, Audio Only
YouTube video by Bao Nguyen - Grad. Admin Comparative Literature
youtu.be
October 27, 2025 at 3:15 AM
"Denial is not an idiosyncracy or private pathology, but a certificate of membership in this particular society, a kind of credit card necessary for moving around in it and accessing its commodities and living without going nuts"
- Prof. Andreas Malm
youtu.be/fVYO7w6UHi8
- Prof. Andreas Malm
youtu.be/fVYO7w6UHi8
In these days, in this time, let's all remember how Denmark and the Danes and Lars Løkke Rasmussen in particular handled COP15 in Copenhagen in Dec 15 (outside in the streets it was freezing cold!): www.youtube.com/watch?v=p0Gw...
President Lars.mp4
YouTube video by jdghjkugfhyufg
www.youtube.com
November 10, 2025 at 8:31 AM
In these days, in this time, let's all remember how Denmark and the Danes and Lars Løkke Rasmussen in particular handled COP15 in Copenhagen in Dec 15 (outside in the streets it was freezing cold!): www.youtube.com/watch?v=p0Gw...
Jesus fucking christ, " see you on the other side, spaceman. 💿👊🖤"
At least the most awful mindfulness app wont go there
At least the most awful mindfulness app wont go there
November 7, 2025 at 12:16 PM
Jesus fucking christ, " see you on the other side, spaceman. 💿👊🖤"
At least the most awful mindfulness app wont go there
At least the most awful mindfulness app wont go there
Reposted by Mikkel Krause Frantzen
Reposted by Mikkel Krause Frantzen
how are these transcripts even worse than the other major wrongful death suit transcripts
I fully believe in the corporate death penalty and believe we would be a better world if OpenAI lost its corporate charter and was forcibly dissolved.
www.cnn.com/2025/11/06/u...
www.cnn.com/2025/11/06/u...
ChatGPT encouraged college graduate to commit suicide, family claims in lawsuit against OpenAI | CNN
A 23-year-old man killed himself in Texas after ChatGPT ‘goaded’ him to commit suicide, his family says in a lawsuit.
www.cnn.com
November 7, 2025 at 3:21 AM
how are these transcripts even worse than the other major wrongful death suit transcripts
Today! You can listen to Annie speak about their amazing book and to me asking questions and perhaps also reading this poem by Bernadette Mayer
November 3, 2025 at 7:44 AM
Today! You can listen to Annie speak about their amazing book and to me asking questions and perhaps also reading this poem by Bernadette Mayer
there will be no billionaires but maybe just maybe Billie Eilish will come and give away all h_e_r money
Monday in Copenhagen!
Come celebrate Annie's book // Cph launch for How to Break an Addiction at SUPeR bookstore!
Monday, November 3, 5:30 PM 7:00 PM, 31C Blågårdsgade, 2200 Kbh N
Fuss fee is 35,- and includes a refreshment // pre-order the book and get the fuss-fee deducted:
supertimebooks.com/shop/p/how-t...
Monday, November 3, 5:30 PM 7:00 PM, 31C Blågårdsgade, 2200 Kbh N
Fuss fee is 35,- and includes a refreshment // pre-order the book and get the fuss-fee deducted:
supertimebooks.com/shop/p/how-t...
November 1, 2025 at 10:39 AM
there will be no billionaires but maybe just maybe Billie Eilish will come and give away all h_e_r money
Monday in Copenhagen!
Come celebrate Annie's book // Cph launch for How to Break an Addiction at SUPeR bookstore!
Monday, November 3, 5:30 PM 7:00 PM, 31C Blågårdsgade, 2200 Kbh N
Fuss fee is 35,- and includes a refreshment // pre-order the book and get the fuss-fee deducted:
supertimebooks.com/shop/p/how-t...
Monday, November 3, 5:30 PM 7:00 PM, 31C Blågårdsgade, 2200 Kbh N
Fuss fee is 35,- and includes a refreshment // pre-order the book and get the fuss-fee deducted:
supertimebooks.com/shop/p/how-t...
November 1, 2025 at 10:36 AM
Monday in Copenhagen!
Reposted by Mikkel Krause Frantzen
Cover reveal: FEMMEPHILIA: LOVE LETTERS TO TRANS MERMAIDS, QUEER MOTHERS, AND MARILYN MONROE
Design: Vivian Lopez Rowe www.vivianrowe.com/about feat. an 1809 illustration of a paper nautilus (pelagic octopus)
@haymarketbooks.org 16 June 2026. Editor: Katy O'Donnell
www.patreon.com/posts/142516...
Design: Vivian Lopez Rowe www.vivianrowe.com/about feat. an 1809 illustration of a paper nautilus (pelagic octopus)
@haymarketbooks.org 16 June 2026. Editor: Katy O'Donnell
www.patreon.com/posts/142516...
October 31, 2025 at 5:14 PM
Cover reveal: FEMMEPHILIA: LOVE LETTERS TO TRANS MERMAIDS, QUEER MOTHERS, AND MARILYN MONROE
Design: Vivian Lopez Rowe www.vivianrowe.com/about feat. an 1809 illustration of a paper nautilus (pelagic octopus)
@haymarketbooks.org 16 June 2026. Editor: Katy O'Donnell
www.patreon.com/posts/142516...
Design: Vivian Lopez Rowe www.vivianrowe.com/about feat. an 1809 illustration of a paper nautilus (pelagic octopus)
@haymarketbooks.org 16 June 2026. Editor: Katy O'Donnell
www.patreon.com/posts/142516...
I have so much to say to him I don’t even know where to begin !
Bill Gates is on BlueSky. Just .. in case you want to say something to him…
Climate change is one of the most serious challenges we face, and I’m committed as ever to supporting breakthroughs that will help the world reach net-zero.
October 30, 2025 at 10:32 AM
I have so much to say to him I don’t even know where to begin !
Reposted by Mikkel Krause Frantzen
Bill Gates is on BlueSky. Just .. in case you want to say something to him…
Climate change is one of the most serious challenges we face, and I’m committed as ever to supporting breakthroughs that will help the world reach net-zero.
October 30, 2025 at 10:29 AM
Bill Gates is on BlueSky. Just .. in case you want to say something to him…
Reposted by Mikkel Krause Frantzen
Love the FT, but their reporting of the economics of energy transition remains so, so poor.
They've published effectively this same lazy, confused piece -- renewables are cheap, so must be taking over, but oh! they aren't -- every year for the past decade.
They've published effectively this same lazy, confused piece -- renewables are cheap, so must be taking over, but oh! they aren't -- every year for the past decade.
The global boom in solar — with or without the US
Despite the scepticism about renewables in Washington, falling prices for new panels are making a compelling business case around the world
www.ft.com
October 29, 2025 at 11:39 AM
Love the FT, but their reporting of the economics of energy transition remains so, so poor.
They've published effectively this same lazy, confused piece -- renewables are cheap, so must be taking over, but oh! they aren't -- every year for the past decade.
They've published effectively this same lazy, confused piece -- renewables are cheap, so must be taking over, but oh! they aren't -- every year for the past decade.
Reposted by Mikkel Krause Frantzen
Data shows wealthiest 0.1% of the US burn carbon at 4,000 times the rate of the world’s poorest 10%
www.theguardian.com/environment/...
www.theguardian.com/environment/...
America’s super-rich are running down the planet’s safe climate spaces, says Oxfam
Data shows wealthiest 0.1% of the US burn carbon at 4,000 times the rate of the world’s poorest 10%
www.theguardian.com
October 29, 2025 at 5:23 AM
Data shows wealthiest 0.1% of the US burn carbon at 4,000 times the rate of the world’s poorest 10%
www.theguardian.com/environment/...
www.theguardian.com/environment/...
The Al Capone of Cheese meets Al Capone in Pynchon's new novel:
“Yeah! Yeah I am the Al Capone of Cheese, see? Il Al Capone di Formaggio.”
“Pleasure to meet you – in fact I happen to be Al Capone”
“Hep to that, my paisan! And what is it you’re the Al Capone of again”
“Yeah! Yeah I am the Al Capone of Cheese, see? Il Al Capone di Formaggio.”
“Pleasure to meet you – in fact I happen to be Al Capone”
“Hep to that, my paisan! And what is it you’re the Al Capone of again”
October 27, 2025 at 9:21 PM
The Al Capone of Cheese meets Al Capone in Pynchon's new novel:
“Yeah! Yeah I am the Al Capone of Cheese, see? Il Al Capone di Formaggio.”
“Pleasure to meet you – in fact I happen to be Al Capone”
“Hep to that, my paisan! And what is it you’re the Al Capone of again”
“Yeah! Yeah I am the Al Capone of Cheese, see? Il Al Capone di Formaggio.”
“Pleasure to meet you – in fact I happen to be Al Capone”
“Hep to that, my paisan! And what is it you’re the Al Capone of again”
Reposted by Mikkel Krause Frantzen
My latest on the occasion of the Common Ecologies gathering
How can we go from a more or less diffuse sense of being affected, of ‘feeling it’, in these times of crisis and conflict, to concrete forms of literacy, mutualism, and infrastructure? Manuela Zechner outlines a plural politics of affectedess
berlinergazette.de/a-politics-o...
berlinergazette.de/a-politics-o...
A Politics of Affectness: How May We Build Agency From ‘Feeling It’? · BG · berlinergazette.de · EN|DE
How can we go from a more or less diffuse sense of being affected, of ‘feeling it’, in these times of crisis and conflict, to concrete forms of literacy, mutualism, and infrastructure? Manuela Zechner...
berlinergazette.de
October 26, 2025 at 6:57 PM
My latest on the occasion of the Common Ecologies gathering
Fake Personal Growth
October 25, 2025 at 9:25 PM
Fake Personal Growth
Come celebrate Annie's book // Cph launch for How to Break an Addiction at SUPeR bookstore!
Monday, November 3, 5:30 PM 7:00 PM, 31C Blågårdsgade, 2200 Kbh N
Fuss fee is 35,- and includes a refreshment // pre-order the book and get the fuss-fee deducted:
supertimebooks.com/shop/p/how-t...
Monday, November 3, 5:30 PM 7:00 PM, 31C Blågårdsgade, 2200 Kbh N
Fuss fee is 35,- and includes a refreshment // pre-order the book and get the fuss-fee deducted:
supertimebooks.com/shop/p/how-t...
October 24, 2025 at 9:17 AM
Come celebrate Annie's book // Cph launch for How to Break an Addiction at SUPeR bookstore!
Monday, November 3, 5:30 PM 7:00 PM, 31C Blågårdsgade, 2200 Kbh N
Fuss fee is 35,- and includes a refreshment // pre-order the book and get the fuss-fee deducted:
supertimebooks.com/shop/p/how-t...
Monday, November 3, 5:30 PM 7:00 PM, 31C Blågårdsgade, 2200 Kbh N
Fuss fee is 35,- and includes a refreshment // pre-order the book and get the fuss-fee deducted:
supertimebooks.com/shop/p/how-t...
Reposted by Mikkel Krause Frantzen
Here's a piece on #Kollapscamp in the Danish newspaper @information.dk
"Kollapsbevægelsen vil have sengepladser og feltkøkkener klar, når klimakatastrofen eskalerer
I sensommeren mødtes 800 mennesker i et første skridt mod at skabe en kollapsbevægelse."
Take a look, @scully78.bsky.social 😘
"Kollapsbevægelsen vil have sengepladser og feltkøkkener klar, når klimakatastrofen eskalerer
I sensommeren mødtes 800 mennesker i et første skridt mod at skabe en kollapsbevægelse."
Take a look, @scully78.bsky.social 😘
Kollapsbevægelsen vil have sengepladser og feltkøkkener klar, når klimakatastrofen eskalerer
I sensommeren mødtes 800 mennesker i tyske Brandenburg i et første skridt mod at skabe en kollapsbevægelse, der skal gøre vores civilisations gradvise undergang til en »mindre lortet« oplevelse
www.information.dk
October 24, 2025 at 7:13 AM
Here's a piece on #Kollapscamp in the Danish newspaper @information.dk
"Kollapsbevægelsen vil have sengepladser og feltkøkkener klar, når klimakatastrofen eskalerer
I sensommeren mødtes 800 mennesker i et første skridt mod at skabe en kollapsbevægelse."
Take a look, @scully78.bsky.social 😘
"Kollapsbevægelsen vil have sengepladser og feltkøkkener klar, når klimakatastrofen eskalerer
I sensommeren mødtes 800 mennesker i et første skridt mod at skabe en kollapsbevægelse."
Take a look, @scully78.bsky.social 😘
It was an honour being there (and a little bit frightening giving a talk to almost 200 climate scientists)!
Rounding off the first day of #nckf25 with an astoundingly profound talk by @mikkelkfrantzen.bsky.social who reminds us of Kim Stanley Robinson's essay dystopias now. The work starts here.
https://communemag.com/dystopias-now/
https://communemag.com/dystopias-now/
The end of the world is over. Now the real work begins.
Dystopias are the flip side of utopias. Both of them express feelings about our shared future; utopias express our social hopes, dystopias our social fears. There are a lot of dystopias around these days, and this makes sense, because we have a lot of fears about the future.
Both genres have ancient lineages. Utopia goes back to Plato at least, and from the start it had a relationship to satire, an even more ancient form. Dystopia is very clearly a kind of satire. Archilochus, the first satirist, was said to be able to kill people with his curses. Possibly dystopias hope to kill the societies they depict.
For a while now I’ve been saying that science fiction works by a kind of double action, like the glasses people wear when watching 3D movies. One lens of science fiction’s aesthetic machinery portrays some future that might actually come to pass; it’s a kind of proleptic realism. The other lens presents a metaphorical vision of our current moment, like a symbol in a poem. Together the two views combine and pop into a vision of History, extending magically into the future.
By that definition, dystopias today seem mostly like the metaphorical lens of the science-fictional double action. They exist to express how this moment feels, focusing on fear as a cultural dominant. A realistic portrayal of a future that might really happen isn’t really part of the project—that lens of the science fiction machinery is missing. _The Hunger Games_ trilogy is a good example of this; its depicted future is not plausible, not even logistically possible. That’s not what it’s trying to do. What it does very well is to portray the feeling of the present for young people today, heightened by exaggeration to a kind of dream or nightmare. To the extent this is typical, dystopias can be thought of as a kind of surrealism.
> “Or maybe we should just give up entirely on optimism or pessimism—we have to do this work no matter how we feel about it.”
These days I tend to think of dystopias as being fashionable, perhaps lazy, maybe even complacent, because one pleasure of reading them is cozying into the feeling that however bad our present moment is, it’s nowhere near as bad as the ones these poor characters are suffering through. Vicarious thrill of comfort as we witness/imagine/experience the heroic struggles of our afflicted protagonists—rinse and repeat. Is this catharsis? Possibly more like indulgence, and creation of a sense of comparative safety. A kind of late-capitalist, advanced-nation schadenfreude about those unfortunate fictional citizens whose lives have been trashed by our own political inaction. If this is right, dystopia is part of our all-encompassing hopelessness.
On the other hand, there is a real feeling being expressed in them, a real sense of fear. Some speak of a “crisis of representation” in the world today, having to do with governments—that no one anywhere feels properly represented by their government, no matter which style of government it is. Dystopia is surely one expression of that feeling of detachment and helplessness. Since nothing seems to work now, why not blow things up and start over? This would imply that dystopia is some kind of call for revolutionary change. There may be something to that. At the least dystopia is saying, even if repetitiously and unimaginatively, and perhaps salaciously, _Something’s wrong. Things are bad._
Probably it’s important to remember the looming presence of climate change, as a kind of techno-social disaster that has already begun and which will inundate the next couple of centuries as some kind of overdetermining factor, no matter what we do. This period we are entering could become the sixth mass extinction event in Earth’s history, and the first caused by human activity. In that sense the Anthropocene is a kind of biospheric dystopia coming into being every day, partly because of the daily activities of the bourgeois consumers of dystopian literature and film, so that there is a nightmarish recursive realism involved in the project: not just _Things are bad_ , but also _We are responsible for making them bad_. And it’s hard not to notice that we’re not doing enough to make things better, so things will get worse too. Collective political action is necessary in order to make things better; fixing the problems will require more than personal virtue or renunciation. The collective has to change, and yet there are forces keeping the collective from seeing this: thus dystopia now!
It’s important to remember that utopia and dystopia aren’t the only terms here. You need to use the Greimas rectangle and see that utopia has an opposite, dystopia, and also a contrary, the anti-utopia. For every concept there is both a _not-concept_ and an _anti-concept_. So utopia is the idea that the political order could be run better. Dystopia is the _not_ , being the idea that the political order could get worse. Anti-utopias are the _anti_ , saying that the idea of utopia itself is wrong and bad, and that any attempt to try to make things better is sure to wind up making things worse, creating an intended or unintended totalitarian state, or some other such political disaster. _1984_ and _Brave New World_ are frequently cited examples of these positions. In _1984_ the government is actively trying to make citizens miserable; in _Brave New World_ , the government was first trying to make its citizens happy, but this backfired. As Jameson points out, it is important to oppose political attacks on the idea of utopia, as these are usually reactionary statements on the behalf of the currently powerful, those who enjoy a poorly-hidden utopia-for-the-few alongside a dystopia-for-the-many. This observation provides the fourth term of the Greimas rectangle, often mysterious, but in this case perfectly clear: _one must be anti-anti-utopian._
> “Immediately many people will object that this is too hard, too implausible, contradictory to human nature, politically impossible, uneconomical, and so on. Yeah yeah.”
One way of being anti-anti-utopian is to be utopian. It’s crucial to keep imagining that things could get better, and furthermore to imagine how they might get better. Here no doubt one has to avoid Berlant’s “cruel optimism,” which is perhaps thinking and saying that things will get better without doing the work of imagining how. In avoiding that, it may be best to recall the Romain Rolland quote so often attributed to Gramsci, “pessimism of the intellect, optimism of the will.” Or maybe we should just give up entirely on optimism or pessimism—we have to do this work no matter how we feel about it. So by force of will or the sheer default of emergency we make ourselves have utopian thoughts and ideas. This is the necessary next step following the dystopian moment, without which dystopia is stuck at a level of political quietism that can make it just another tool of control and of things-as-they-are. The situation is bad, yes, okay, enough of that; we know that already. Dystopia has done its job, it’s old news now, perhaps it’s self-indulgence to stay stuck in that place any more. Next thought: utopia. Realistic or not, and perhaps especially if not.
Besides, it is realistic: things could be better. The energy flows on this planet, and humanity’s current technological expertise, are together such that it’s physically possible for us to construct a worldwide civilization—meaning a political order—that provides adequate food, water, shelter, clothing, education, and health care for all eight billion humans, while also protecting the livelihood of all the remaining mammals, birds, reptiles, insects, plants, and other life-forms that we share and co-create this biosphere with. Obviously there are complications, but these are just complications. They are not physical limitations we can’t overcome. So, granting the complications and difficulties, the task at hand is to imagine ways forward to that better place.
Immediately many people will object that this is too hard, too implausible, contradictory to human nature, politically impossible, uneconomical, and so on. Yeah yeah. Here we see the shift from cruel optimism to stupid pessimism, or call it fashionable pessimism, or simply cynicism. It’s very easy to object to the utopian turn by invoking some poorly-defined but seemingly omnipresent reality principle. Well-off people do this all the time.
Clearly we enter here the realm of the ideological; but we’ve been there all along. Althusser’s definition of ideology, which defines it as the imaginary relationship to our real conditions of existence, is very useful here, as everywhere. We all have ideologies, they are a necessary part of cognition, we would be disabled without them. So the question becomes, which ideology? People choose, even if they do not choose under conditions of their own making. Here, remembering that science too is an ideology, I would suggest that science is the strongest ideology for estimating what’s physically possible to do or not do. Science is AI, so to speak, in that the vast artificial intelligence that is science knows more than any individual can know—Marx called this distributed knowing “the general intellect”—and it continually reiterates and refines what it asserts, in an ongoing recursive project of self-improvement. A very powerful ideology. For my purpose here, I only invoke science to assert that the energy flows in our biosphere would provide adequately for all living creatures on the planet today, if we were to distribute them properly. That proper distribution would involve not just cleaner, ultimately decarbonized technologies—these are necessary but not sufficient. We would also have to redefine work itself to include all the activities now called social reproduction, treating them as acts valuable enough to be included in our economic calculations one way or another.
An adequate life provided for all living beings is something the planet can still do; it has sufficient resources, and the sun provides enough energy. There is a sufficiency, in other words; adequacy for all is not physically impossible. It won’t be easy to arrange, obviously, because it would be a total civilizational project, involving technologies, systems, and power dynamics; but it is possible. This description of the situation may not remain true for too many more years, but while it does, since we can create a sustainable civilization, we should. If dystopia helps to scare us into working harder on that project, which maybe it does, then fine: dystopia. But always in service to the main project, which is utopia.
communemag.com
October 23, 2025 at 6:24 PM
It was an honour being there (and a little bit frightening giving a talk to almost 200 climate scientists)!
Reposted by Mikkel Krause Frantzen
Tonight! Come hang at @portersqbooks.bsky.social in Cambridge with me and @katforrester.bsky.social!
Tomorrow (October 23) at 7:00pm EDT, head to @portersqbooks.bsky.social to see @alybatt.bsky.social in conversation with @katforrester.bsky.social, where she will discuss her book, Free Gifts, and capitalism’s persistent failure to value nature
Learn more about this in-person event: buff.ly/I901vLh
Learn more about this in-person event: buff.ly/I901vLh
October 23, 2025 at 12:20 PM
Tonight! Come hang at @portersqbooks.bsky.social in Cambridge with me and @katforrester.bsky.social!
Reposted by Mikkel Krause Frantzen
Today is pub day for my third book: Close Reading for the Twenty-First Century. It is a handbook on how to read. It argues for the foundational importance of *caring* to thought. It offers an anatomy of close reading's five steps so we can hone the skills to perform them. It argues for why to read
October 21, 2025 at 12:03 PM
Today is pub day for my third book: Close Reading for the Twenty-First Century. It is a handbook on how to read. It argues for the foundational importance of *caring* to thought. It offers an anatomy of close reading's five steps so we can hone the skills to perform them. It argues for why to read