The Dirigible
S01:E16

The Dirigible

Episode description

The Dirigible

In this episode we take the skies and travel between distant settlements with an anarchist crew on our beautiful balloon.

Transcript: https://wiki.tomasino.org/writing/Solarpunk-Prompts---The-Dirigible

Links mentioned:

Music from:

Jean Toba - really beautiful my mambo

Download transcript (.srt)
0:09

Hello World, I'm Tomasino.

0:12

This is SolarPunk Promps,

0:15

a series for writers where we discuss solar punk,

0:18

a literary, artistic,

0:20

and activist movement that envisions and works toward

0:23

actualizing a sustainable future interconnected with nature

0:27

and community.

0:29

Our goal is to enable stories that will help us to imagine

0:32

that future and give us a blueprint for real change.

0:36

In this series,

0:38

we spend each episode exploring a single solar punk story

0:42

prompt, adding some commentary, some inspirations,

0:45

and some considerations.

0:47

Most importantly,

0:48

we consider how that story might help us to better envision

0:51

a sustainable civilization.

0:53

If this is your first time here,

0:55

I'd recommend checking out our introduction episode first,

0:59

where we talk in more depth about what solar punk is,

1:02

why you should care, and why this series came into being.

1:06

Today's prompt is the Dirigible.

1:10

A modern zeppelin is the fastest and cheapest mode of

1:14

transportation for several remote communities.

1:18

Its anarchist crew is always ready to welcome a new member,

1:23

even if they're clearly a runaway kid looking for an

1:26

adventure.

1:27

This prompt shares some similarities with our previous

1:30

episode, The Ship.

1:33

Where that was concerned with trade and practical realities

1:36

of a floating community,

1:38

this prompt is an opportunity for a bit of romanticism.

1:41

It's unlikely that Dirigibles will objectively be the best

1:45

mode of transportation in almost any future situation.

1:49

Aerostats,

1:50

or aircraft that remain aloft by aerostatic buoyancy,

1:55

have practical purposes, such as weather balloons.

1:58

But for most of the uses,

2:00

there's no way to get rid of them.

2:00

are better vehicles available.

2:02

The first hot air balloons were launched by two different

2:05

competing teams in France,

2:07

only months apart way back in 1783.

2:11

Another French -engineering inventor, Jules -Henri Jaffard,

2:15

built a steam -powered airship which took flight for the

2:18

first time in 1852.

2:20

For a short time, they were the darlings of the sky.

2:23

These early balloons and airships were filled with

2:26

hydrogen, cheap, abundant, and unfortunately volatile,

2:30

as the Hindenburg in the test.

2:32

Today's airships use helium almost exclusively,

2:36

but at a much higher cost and lower lifting power.

2:39

There is an alternative still being explored which may

2:42

offer some potential for the future.

2:45

A vacuum airship was first proposed by Italian Jesuit

2:49

priest Francesco Lanniterzi in 1670.

2:53

Rather than filling a large volume with less dense gas than

2:57

the surrounding air,

2:58

A vacuum airship would create a large volume of voided

3:01

space.

3:02

This would theoretically allow the greatest possible

3:05

aerostatic lift,

3:07

but without any internal gas countering the air pressure,

3:10

the framing needs to be much stronger to avoid collapse.

3:14

Even if technology finds such metamaterials in graphene,

3:19

for instance,

3:20

the airship design is still not likely to fit many needs.

3:23

They remain difficult to fly, to train on,

3:26

to secure when grounded, and to maintain.

3:29

But even with all of that,

3:31

they still have a special place in the imagination of

3:33

authors, thanks to steampunks aesthetic.

3:36

Let's borrow that element then, for this prompt,

3:40

and not feel too bad about it.

3:42

While it may not be the most practical air travel solution

3:45

for our future,

3:46

it still does embrace some of the values we want to express

3:49

in solar punk.

3:50

It suggests a balance with nature and its design,

3:53

even if that design is a bit hand -wavy.

3:56

Let us be romantic, and take to the skies in near silence,

4:00

floating under a great balloon of vacuum.

4:03

This story is to be about stowaways,

4:07

about contact between cultures,

4:09

about the idea of travel when travel is not easy,

4:13

where each journey is an expedition.

4:16

The heart of the story, of course, is the Dirigible's crew,

4:20

a crew which is a found family.

4:22

For many people, from the neighboring towns, villages,

4:25

maybe much farther away.

4:28

If the ship is making distant trips between remote

4:30

settlements, its crew may be quite diverse.

4:33

They might have been airspace pilots for some time already,

4:37

always in love with the sky,

4:39

or maybe just needed to make a change in their life,

4:42

not minding some hard work.

4:45

There will be mechanics and engineers to keep them afloat,

4:48

or perhaps the crew will all need to wear many hats.

4:52

Weight is a premium on an airship, after all.

4:56

But before we get too deep into the story,

4:58

let us know what you think.

4:58

the story angles,

4:58

let's consider the airship as a borrowed genre element one

5:02

last time.

5:04

This is one of the most well -known aspects of steampunk

5:07

fiction,

5:08

and it will carry with it some of that baggage if we're not

5:11

careful.

5:12

How do we differentiate a solar -punkte -originable from a

5:15

steampunk one?

5:17

Well, the crew, as mentioned, is a great starting point.

5:20

A steampunk story might have a crew that's part of a

5:23

country's naval force,

5:24

or perhaps a luxury liner from a prestigious company.

5:29

It could be a stately affair with fine dresses, music,

5:32

and so on,

5:33

or perhaps it's a sky -pirate with fancy brass trimmings,

5:37

top hats with goggles on them, and long leather coats.

5:40

Our crew and passengers, though,

5:43

have their base in a sustainable community,

5:46

and use this transport as an expression of that.

5:49

Do botanists cultivate hydroponics that hang below as the

5:54

ship travels?

5:56

What sort of hybrid skill training went into the MacGyvers

5:59

that lead the crew?

6:00

How much more likely are you to see crew in coveralls with

6:03

50 pockets?

6:05

Would anyone aboard be considered just a passenger at all?

6:08

Would everyone be required to do some sort of job?

6:12

Now we're getting back into that Solar Pump mindset.

6:15

And as you can see,

6:16

this should be taking quite a different shape than you'd

6:19

expect to see in a steampunk story.

6:21

Let's look even deeper at the prompt situation for clues on

6:24

how to take that farther.

6:27

The airship journey could take them to faraway islands or

6:31

hard to reach villages around the Amazon.

6:33

Across vast distances on the African continent,

6:36

perhaps the route is circuitous and won't return back to

6:40

where it began for months.

6:42

If our ship is traveling a great distance in a single

6:45

bound,

6:46

they might expect to be airborne for weeks at a time.

6:49

What other social activities would need to happen?

6:53

What sort of special planning would that take?

6:55

What would the atmosphere be like as they leave a port?

7:00

How about a week later, not having set down again?

7:03

How about two?

7:06

What pressures build and change?

7:09

And then the magic happens.

7:11

They reach a destination.

7:13

Perhaps it's just one of many,

7:15

but at every stop they are always being met with an

7:18

intrigued community starved for news, starved for gossip,

7:22

yet also a bit wary.

7:24

The last time the airship came,

7:25

it left with some of their youth looking for a life of

7:29

adventure.

7:30

What might they encounter at each stop?

7:33

Are there different resources they need from each place?

7:37

Are their travelers returning home?

7:39

Family to see, only a few times a year?

7:42

Or friends they traveled with in ages past?

7:45

How is this trip different?

7:48

What if this time around they need to transport someone

7:51

important?

7:52

What if it's someone from a very different culture or some

7:55

reason?

7:56

researchers, engineers, botanists,

7:58

sent to analyze local cultures and plants,

8:01

or to bring medicines, or to gather medicines to take home.

8:06

In the solar punk future you're writing,

8:08

how common is travel?

8:10

We know that the cost of the environment from travel today

8:13

is quite high,

8:14

whether that be from commercial air travel or mass reliance

8:17

on cars.

8:18

We know that a future in balance with our environment will

8:21

mean significant changes in the way we move,

8:24

and there is an uncomfortable feeling when we think about a

8:26

future world where you can't just hop on a plane for a

8:29

vacation.

8:30

It feels like going backwards,

8:32

but perhaps some small measure of that is the anxiety of

8:36

potential isolation.

8:39

Our societies used to be fragmented.

8:42

National borders, continental divides,

8:44

even a big river can mean you don't interact with others

8:46

very far away from you.

8:48

This story could be a good place to think about that.

8:51

The divide between digital and physical spaces.

8:56

How does your future world address these challenges head

9:00

-on?

9:00

Where in a future, electronic messages can be instant.

9:04

They can give us a presence which is understood and

9:07

accepted.

9:08

We won't expect people to fly half the world just for a two

9:12

-day conference or a business meeting.

9:14

Physical travel requires a different level of need.

9:18

It could be an important life decision to change

9:21

continents.

9:22

And what shape it takes is worth considering and really

9:25

exploring.

9:27

Think about your own experiences today.

9:30

How many friends do you keep in contact with regularly whom

9:33

you rarely if ever see in person?

9:36

Do you have close relationships with people you've never

9:39

met?

9:40

Only a few decades ago that wasn't a possibility.

9:43

Yet now we know online relationships are real

9:47

relationships.

9:48

The dynamics of self in digital ecosystems is a whole topic

9:53

to itself, but do give it a bit of thought.

9:56

Does the modern reality of digital relationships change the

10:00

anxiety of isolation in a post -travel future?

10:05

Will those digital relationships be strong enough as a

10:10

connection to prevent communities from drifting apart in

10:13

different directions?

10:14

Will the focus of the local community re -contextualize

10:19

global diversity?

10:21

These remote villages without any easy access between each

10:25

other or to the wider world may grow in unique directions

10:29

as needed for their environment and people.

10:33

The social mores could change drastically in a short time

10:36

with true isolation.

10:37

We might see that come to play in how they treat stowaways

10:41

for instance,

10:42

or perhaps a rite of passage in one community is seen as

10:45

rude or a grave insult in another.

10:49

There are many sociological implications here to explore as

10:53

you float between them on your brilliant little airship.

10:57

Make it an adventure.

10:59

Until next time, I'm Tom Osino.

11:02

I hope you'll join me for the next Solar Pump Prompt.

11:06

My mumbo by Jean Toba.

11:06

My mumbo by Jean Toba.