The Refugee Camp
S01:E02

The Refugee Camp

Episode description

The Refugee Camp

In this episode our writing prompt takes us to a near-future town that has grown out of a refugee camp. We discuss refugee camps today, community organizations, makers, and the creation that comes from them. We also discuss creole languages and the truths they reveal about a community.

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

Links mentioned in the video:

Music from:

ExMemory - Solar Grid - https://globalpattern.bandcamp.com/album/solarpunk-a-brighter-perspective

#solarpunk #writing #podcast

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0:11

Hello world, I'm Tomasino. This is Solarpunk Prompts, a series for writers, where we discuss

0:20

Solarpunk as a literary, artistic, and activist movement. Or, as Rowanna Silva describes it,

0:29

Solarpunk is a genre of ecologically oriented, speculative fiction, characterized both by

0:36

its aesthetic and its underlying socio-political vision. In each episode, we look at one story

0:44

prompt using that genre lens, offering commentary on the prompt, some inspirations from the world

0:52

today, and some considerations for writers. Most importantly, we consider how that story might

0:59

help us to better envision a sustainable civilization. If this is your first time here,

1:07

I'd recommend checking out our introduction episode first, where we talk about what Solarpunk is,

1:13

why you should care, and why this series came into being. This episode's prompt is titled,

1:22

The Refugee Camp. There is a full-fledged town built from a refugee camp, which was set up there

1:32

two decades ago. The inhabitants speak their own creole, a mix of more than five languages,

1:40

and a very shaky relationships with their neighboring communities or states, each of which

1:47

considers it a lawless territory, and might be plotting to take over. I think the refugee camp

1:56

is a fitting place to start our prompts. They are the standard setting in our world for communities

2:03

just coming through tragedy. When there is war, famine, flooding, or any number of challenges

2:10

to a people, they often find shelters in foreign lands, sometimes thrown together with other groups

2:16

fleeing their own hardships. Refugee stories are also plentiful in science fiction. Superman is a

2:24

refugee from Krypton, the Doctor is a refugee from Gallifrey, or Arthur Dent, a human refugee from

2:35

Krypton. These are all individual stories, though, and not the camp and community we're striving for.

2:42

Instead, we might look to Battlestar Galactica, or Babylon 5, or the Nantucket trilogy,

2:48

for example, of entire communities of refugees. And indeed, those are vibrant and capture a bit

2:55

of the colorful characters and internal conflicts that arise in such places. But Solarpunk can

3:02

depart from this view of refugee camps as places of despair. In our prompt, the camp has grown

3:10

into a full-fledged town. That suggests a thriving regrowth emerging from this mixed culture

3:17

and reflected in their Creole dialect. Is that a realistic vision to take, though?

3:24

Is this just Solarpunk being naive and blindly optimistic? Let's take a look to real refugee

3:32

camps in South Sudan and Uganda, where the rogue agency, a Berlin-based nonprofit, has been working

3:40

with communities to help them develop innovation hubs. Five of these communities have linked

3:46

together to form AskNet, a program that offers training in open source hardware and software,

3:54

entrepreneurship, media production, gender equality, and financial literacy. They also

4:00

run repair cafes, giving hands-on experience and learning, and reducing waste, and preserving

4:07

natural resources. And that's just one program that's built and run by small community organizations.

4:16

So how about Humanitaire? It was founded by individuals who saw the amazing rebuilding

4:22

efforts after natural disasters like the 2004 earthquake in the Indian Ocean,

4:28

which caused the deadliest tsunami in history. The world responded with one of the greatest

4:35

relief efforts in record time all at once, but then medicine spoiled before they could reach the sick

4:42

and food rotted before it could find the hungry. This failure of local logistics is what inspired

4:50

the organization. What do they do now? Well, they don't intervene. Instead, they provide spaces

4:58

where communities can implement their own plans and choose from a variety of tools and models that

5:05

Humanitaire makes available. They provide teaching, processes, toolkits, and most importantly, space.

5:12

They empower the communities to build their own futures. And now they're up and running in Haiti,

5:18

Nepal, Greece, and the Philippines. And these are both stories of information sharing and empowering

5:26

local communities. They succeed by building together both local talent and infrastructure

5:34

and focus on sustainability. They even mean sustainability in many forms. There's

5:43

environmental sustainability, processes that can work with a unique local environment.

5:50

There's also economic sustainability, processes that can continue without ongoing external funding

5:57

or donations, and cultural sustainability, respecting and empowering the local cultures.

6:06

When you start thinking of these refugee camps as places where people are building new things,

6:12

new homes, new lives, new opportunities, then the writing opportunities open up for you as well.

6:20

Gone are the two-dimensional sketches of a dirty camp full of broken people. These people are alive

6:26

and empowered. In a different genre setting, we might lean into the shantytown aesthetic or the

6:34

lawlessness of the area might become an easy setting for crime stories. But I challenge you

6:39

with this prompt. See a clear of these well trodden paths. Focus on the community as a vibrant

6:46

living thing. And speaking of shantytowns, I'm reminded of Cory Doctorow's setting in the book

6:54

Makers with its unique community of hackers and their unique way that they use language.

7:00

It brings us to our next aspect of this writing prompt, Creole. According to Collins English

7:08

Dictionary, a Creole is a language that has developed from a mixture of different languages

7:14

and has become the main language in a particular place. These are fascinating growths of blending

7:22

culture and can powerfully illustrate the fundamental aspects of a community,

7:27

who they are, what they believe in, and how they respond to a changing world. Think of the unique

7:35

flavor of the Belter language in the expanse. Every odd word choice or word borrowed from Chinese

7:43

or Indic or Slavic is a reminder of what these people are. In some cases, this unique language

7:51

use even extends to meaningful gestures with hands and shoulders. The way these languages

7:58

develop is so interesting in its own right that there's an indie card game where you can

8:04

collaboratively create one with friends. It's called Dialect, and it won IGDN's Game of the

8:11

Year in 2019, along with a host of other awards. In that game, you and two to four of your friends

8:19

will create what's called an isolation, basically a community set apart from others for some

8:25

interesting reason, and then play out their history across three different ages. The game

8:32

then ends with the isolation no longer being isolated, whether for good or for bad. As the

8:40

game description says, Dialect is a game about an isolated community, their language, and what it

8:47

means for that language to be lost. It's a fascinating way to spend three to four hours

8:53

with friends and incredibly insightful into this exact process. Now, before we go,

9:02

let's take one more look at that prompt. The refugee camp. There's a full-fledged town

9:12

built from a refugee camp, which was set up there two decades ago. The inhabitants speak their own

9:19

Creole, a mixture of more than five languages, and have very shaky relationships with their

9:26

neighboring communities or states, each of which considers it a lawless territory,

9:32

and might be plotting to take over. Okay, it's time to wrap up. Let's review our

9:41

guidelines for solar punk writing one more time. Number one, community as protagonist. 7979 0:09:50,000 --> 0:09:58,0600:09:50,000 --> 0:09:58,060 Remember, there's no chosen one. Number two, infrastructure is sexy. And remember,Remember, there's no chosen one. Number two, infrastructure is sexy. And remember, 8080 0:09:58,460 --> 0:10:05,6500:09:58,460 --> 0:10:05,650 there's no simple solutions. And number three, the human environmental context.there's no simple solutions. And number three, the human environmental context.

10:06

It's not man versus nature. Thanks for joining me today. I hope you'll join me for the next

10:14

solar punk prompt. Music in this episode is from X memory solar grid from the album

10:28

solar punk, a brighter perspective.