Alan Marshall (born 1975) is an Australian author, scholar, and artist working within the discipline of
environmental studies. He is noted as a key scholar in
environmental ethics[1] and for his investigations into eco-friendly cities of the future.[2] Marshall has for a longtime been a teaching / research fellow at two universities in Slovakia;
UPJS and
Prešovská univerzita v Prešove.
Examples of designs that emerged from this project include:
a Hemp Sail Battle Cruiser for the Royal Australian Navy (in which a navy ship had its engines 'designed-out' and in their stead it is powered by
sails made from eco-friendly
hemp)
a
manure-powered swimming pool heating system (in which a luxury pool is heated by the composted
body waste of the swimmers)
a hairy-roofed
Carpathian mountain village where the architecture is adorned with an engineered protective material that mimics the fur of local
brown bears.
These designs, illustrated by and large by Marshall, were compiled into the Wild Design book and then praised by the Australian art & design media.[4]
In January 2013, Marshall started a "Future Green Cities" project which (as noted by CNN[5] and The Independent[6]) explores graphic future scenarios of one-hundred super-ecofriendly cities across the world. Most of Marshall's original artworks from the project were part of a special exhibition at the
BauhausMuseum[7] whilst the "Future London" cityscape from the project was displayed by the
Museum of London as part of its 2018 London Visions exhibition[8] and by the London Design Biennale as part of their 2021 exhibition at
Somerset House.[9] In 2015, the master-class part of this project conducted at Mahidol University was awarded the 2015
Kenneth M. Roemer Innovative Course Design Award by the
Society for Utopian Studies.
The book of the project, Ecotopia 2121, written and illustrated by Marshall, has attracted broad critical acclaim.[10] The Times Higher Education review of Ecotopia 2121 stated "very few academics ever produce anything as stunning and imaginative as this",[11] whilst National Geographic UK,[12]Al Jazeera,[13]ZMEScience,[14]Lithuanian Radio Television, Forbes,[15] and Publishers Weekly[16] variously declared it "curious and creative", "adventurous", "impressive", "visionary", and "monumental". Ecotopia 2121 was put on
Resurgence and Ecologist magazine's Book of the Year list,[17] won a Silver Medal at the 2017 Nautilus Book Awards and placed 1st in the Future Forecasts category of the 2016 Green Book Festival. In turn, the book's "Future San Diego" cityscape was highlighted on the
LA7 TV show Piazza Pulita[18] during the pre-
COP26 climate talks, whilst the "Future Tokyo" cityscape adorned the frontispiece of the book Green Leviathan[19] by Belgian philosopher
Mark Coeckelbergh, and the "Macau 2121" cityscape featured in the pages of the popular Arab women's magazine Sayidaty.[20]
In late 2015, Marshall began a new project in urban ecology called
Frankencities[21] which details the worst-case scenarios of emerging environmental problems in a series of cities around the world whilst comparing them to the insights offered by the
Frankenstein story. The Daily Express and VICE reported that Marshall's work on Frankenstein extended to critiquing the popular idea that Mary Shelley was inspired to write the original Frankenstein novel because she was affected by a volcanically-induced
climate change event known as the
Year Without a Summer.[22]
For the Frankencities project and for the Ecotopia 2121 project, Marshall developed a novel urban design
methodology known as The Literary Method of Urban Design[23] which is not so much about design but more about inventing new social change strategies.[24] A film scripted by Marshall about this methodology was published by National Geographic Indonesia[25] and became an "official selection" at a number of film festivals across Asia[26] and Europe.[27] As well, a series of Marshall's artworks produced via the Literary Method of Urban Design are being displayed in the
Tartu Ülikooli Kunstimuuseum as part of Tartu's
2024 celebrations as the
European Capital of Culture.[28]
In 2020, Marshall began the Global Sheeplands project which investigates the way
sheep have contributed to the making of the modern world.[29] As part of this project, Marshall authored a book titled Sheeplands and also made on-screen contributions to a two-hour
Arte /
NDR TV documentary about the history of sheep farming.[30]
Prior to his 21st century work in the eco-design field, Marshall was mainly involved in
eco-philosophy and
techno-criticism. In the 1990s, Marshall developed a
postmodern version of the Human–Nature relationship,[31] one that throws into doubt the idea that Nature is a united orderly system.[32] Marshall's approach is heavily influenced by the science of
ecology but has been criticised[33] as privileging one school of ecology, i.e.,
plant sociology, over others such as
systems ecology and the ecology of
Gaia -- both of which he critiques as shallow forms of environmentalism.[34] Indeed, his book The Unity of Nature is one of the fiercest critiques of
Systems Theory in general, and
Gaia Theory and
Chaos Theory in particular.
Marshall is also referred to as a critic of the car industry,[35] of the
nuclear industry[36] and of space exploration.[37] His writings on the latter subject have been cited as insightful but are usually regarded by scientists and engineers as being too radically "
environmental"[38] especially his calls for the protection of the Martian landscape.
Fiction
Alan Marshall is also an award-winning writer of fiction; a genre he was very active within from about 1998 to 2002. His works of fiction include an historical novel, Lancewood, about an
iconic New Zealand plant, and a
science fiction radiodrama called This Pointless Thing Called Life that was broadcast on
NPR, KFAI,[39] KUNM,[40] and XM Satellite Radio in the USA. In 2001 This Pointless Thing Called Life received the "Silver Award" from the Mark Time Awards by a panel that included Grammy-award winner
Phil Proctor[41] who said it was "definitely on a par with
Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy".
Along with Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings movie trilogy, This Pointless Thing Called Life was nominated for a
Vogel Award in the category "Best Long Form dramatic science fiction and fantasy production made in New Zealand in the year 2002".[42][43] Like his scholarly writings, Marshall's fiction explores the relationships between "humans and technology" and between "humans and nature".
The sequel to This Pointless Thing Called Life was another award-winning full-length radio feature broadcast in four parts on XM Satellite and by some NPR stations in 2003. This sequel was titled This Miserable Thing Called Life.[44]
^Strochlic, N. (2018). "Here's What Our Cities Could Look Like in 2121". National Geographic. 233 (2).
^The DeGruyter's Handbook of the Circular Economy (2023) lists Alan Marshall as the inventor of ecomimicry, advancing his definition of it as: "the practice of designing socially-responsive and environmentally-responsible techniques and technologies for a particular local setting as inspired by the plants, animals, and ecosystems native to that local setting". See A. Marshall (2007) ‘The Theory and Practice of Ecomimicry’, Sustaining Gondwana Working Paper Series, Issue 3, published by Curtin University of Technology: Perth, or A. Marshall (2009) ‘Wild Design: The Ecomimicry Project’, published by North Atlantic Books: Berkeley.
^See, for example: Downton, P. (2009) Review of Wild Design,
Artlink, Vol. 29, No. 4; and Wakely, M (2009)
Design Inspired By Nature, ABC Radio National's By Design program.
^A film co-produced by Alan Marshall that introduces the story of the purported connections between the Year Without a Summer and the "Frankenstein" novel was screened at the
"Westside Mountain Film Festival" in Epirus, Greece in August 2021. In 2020, Marshall penned an article that critiqued these connections for
The Conversation.
^See for example: Marshall, A. (2018) 'The Fantasy Method of Urban Design', Diseña 12, February 2018 issue -- available in Spanish and English via Diseña.
^For example, The Literary Method of Urban Design movie was part of the
Саратовские Страдания Docudrama Film Festival (Saratov, Russia) and the 2021
Edukino festival held at the
Zacheta, the Polish National Museum of Contemporary Art.
^An article summarizing this project appeared in
Wales Arts Review An educational movie directed by Marshall that also summarized the project won "Best Educational Movie" at the
Wales International Film Festival for Children and was also screened at the 2021
RAM Film Festival in Rovereto, Italy and at the 12th
Edukino film festival held in Warsaw, Poland.
^See a preview for this documentary at this website
here.
^de Laplante, K. (2004) Environmental Alchemy: How to turn Ecological Science into Ecological Philosophy, Environmental Ethics, Vol 26, Winter Issue.
^Alan Marshall (2002) The Unity of Nature, Imperial College Press/World Scientific: London & Singapore.
^Marshall, A. (2015) 'Ecotopia 2121: Car-free Cities of the 22nd Century', Environment and Natural Resources Journal. Vol 13, No.1,pp.28-38
^See, for example: A. Marshall (2005) 'The Social and Ethical Aspects of Nuclear Waste', Electronic Green Journal, Issue 21, (Earth Day Issue); or A. Marshall (2005) ‘Questioning the Motivations for International Repositories for Nuclear Waste, Global Environmental Politics, Vol. 5, No. 2, May 2005, pp. 1-7; or A. Marshall (2006) Dangerous Dawn: The New Nuclear Age, BNI/FoE: Melbourne, or A. Marshall (2008) 'Leaving Messages about Our Radioactive Waste for Future Generations', in A. P Latiffer, ed, Nuclear Waste Research, Nova Publishers, pp37-46., or A. Marshall (2019)
Godzilla and its Evolving Environmental Messages, The Conversation, May 29th, 2019; or Russian Invasion Should Encourage Indonesia to Rethink Its Nuclear Plan,
The Conversation, March 28th issue.
^See for example, reviews of Marshall's space ethics in the following articles: Almar, I. (2002) 'What could COSPAR do to protect the planetary and space environment?', Advances in Space Research', Volume 30, Issue 6, 1577–1588; McArthur, D. and Boran, I., "Agent-Centered Restrictions and the Ethics of Space Exploration" in Journal of Social Philosophy, Vol. 35, No. 1 (Spring 2004) pp. 148–163; "
Cosmic Preservationist", New Scientist, 3 January 2003; and Fogg, M.J. (2000) 'The ethical dimensions of space settlement', Space Policy, Volume 16, Issue 3, 16 July 2000, Pages 205–211.