this post was submitted on 03 Feb 2026
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That's deliberate.
The lack of a theoretical and practical basis is deliberate, or the idea that Solarpunk lacks such a basis is deliberate? I'm referring to what people that consider themselves in the Solarpunk community and movement have described and recommended to me for reading.
For example, from the Solarpunk Manifesto:
It's primarily based on aesthetics and finding potential plans for future society, not a practical means for getting there or implementing said plans, despite its insistence on doing so. This is why I say it isn't really scientific socialism, but utopianism, which has historically resulted in one-off communes that last a good while without actually challenging the status quo or spreading.
Solarpunk in practice borrows from anarchism or Marxism, without fully committing to either, and as such is reduced to its aesthetics.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romanticism
Romanticism emerged as a reaction to the Industrial Revolution. The Industrial Revolution raised productivity, but with a cost in culture and closeness-to-nature.
Where things scale and become automated, it is natural for a counter-movement to yearn for a bucolic life close to nature. Solarpunk expresses the same yearning: a desire for a rich local culture close to nature in the modern technological level.