Future Tense

Future Tense

The world can feel as though it is in turmoil, from global conflict and environmental disasters to stalled politics and social unrest. From the domestic to the global, challenges can feel relentless and intractable. Short election cycles and a hyper focus on the next sound bite or Insta Reel, telescope and narrow our perspective.

But what happens if we zoom out, and think more expansively? How does our perspective change and our ideas become bolder and further reaching when we think on a much longer time scale altogether?

Future Tense is the foremost of our programme themes this year, bringing together a range of events and topics which offer the option of a truly different way of looking at things. As we relaunch our Festival at the Edinburgh Futures Institute (EFI), we’re joined by some of the brightest minds currently exploring how looking to the future might save us from the present. Are there tensions in the future? Of course: but there’s hope and opportunity too.

Across six elements, we explore how future-oriented thinking, learning across generations and disciplines, and approaching change with curiosity, compassion and imagination, could help us untangle the huge systematic challenges we currently face, both as individuals and as a society. We’ll be looking at some of the most game-changing ideas emerging from technology, economics, philosophy, literature and creativity, and the new thinking which brings these fields together in surprising and impactful ways. From AI to sustainability, new takes on capitalism, history and the green economy, together we’ll have nuanced and progressive discussions that both illuminate the biggest challenges of our time, and suggest ways forward.

1. A Toast to the Future

For the first time, we’ll open with a special Gala event of readings, bringing you a kaleidoscope of perspectives and provocations, from the hopeful to the momentous, as we ask a diverse line-up of stellar writers to explore the idea of The Future (in 7 minutes each). Be inspired, challenged, and delighted by experimental author Martin MacInnes (In Ascension); EFI’s Chair in the Ethics of Data and AI, Shannon Vallor; form-bending writer Irenosen Okojie; speculative novelist Naomi Alderman; national treasure Richard Holloway; and award-winning poet and performer Joelle Taylor. This event will ignite your curiosity and plant the seeds of enquiry which we hope will germinate for you across your time at the Festival as you explore our ideas and themes. Supported by Claire and Mark Urquhart.

2. Future Library

The Future Library project is a meditation on time, and the imagination. A writer creates a work every year for 100 years from 2014, which is placed inside the Future Library in Oslo, remaining unread until 2114. Literary superstar Margaret Atwood contributed the first book to this visionary project, designed by Scottish artist Katie Paterson. Recently, Atwood has been developing the concept of the ‘Practical Utopia’, asking simple questions to push us to completely redesign how we live. She joins us by livestream to explore how we can engender a better future. There will also be hands-on workshops, and the announcement of the 2025 Future Library contributor, to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the project.

3. Generations

We can only plan effectively for the future by understanding what came before, and examining the impact of current decision making beyond the visible horizon. Generations will offer perspectives on how we can become ‘good ancestors’, from Roman Krznaric and Ella Saltmarshe, and on how our political systems can be adapted to consider more deeply our impact on the generations after us (led by Wales’ first Commissioner for Future Generations, Sophie Howe). We’ve crafted a fascinating series of intergenerational conversations between writers who share common ground too – don’t miss, for instance, poets Roger McGough and Hollie McNish together.

4. AI, Data and Complex Systems

We’re at the precipice of a huge change in our relationship with, and trust in, technology. There’s no resisting the shifting tide, but there are vast differences in perceptions about its benefits and dangers. We’ll bring together experts on data to consider how tech can help us build a better world, and where we need to be most wary. We have embarked on some groundbreaking research of our own into how writers and publishers might wrestle some agency back from AI, led by researcher and University of Edinburgh Chancellor’s Fellow Pip Thornton; come and hear the fruits of our fascinating workshops, and try out our Writer vs AI installations.

5. Future Economics and Politics

How is capitalism changing? How are we going to finance the green tech revolution we need? With a more unequal world than ever before, how much wealth is too much? As capital changes hands between generations, and tech looks set to revolutionise the economy, a range of fascinating economic thinkers and journalists grapple with what comes next. Including Nobel Prize winner Joseph E Stiglitz, BBC’s chief economics editor Dharshini David on the green economy, Ken Costa, Grace Blakeley, Ingrid Robeyns, and more.

6. The Imaginative Realm

If some of us have only just begun to think ahead creatively, sci-fi writers and authors of speculative fiction have been imagining the future – or rather, futures – for decades. What alternative universes have they been creating? What can great storytelling reveal to us about ourselves? First class writers from across these genres, including R F Kuang, Adrian Tchaikovsky, and Irenosen Okojie discuss their imagined worlds, a group of writers and scientists get together to explore truly living within our means (like astronauts!)

 

A C Grayling: Who, If Anyone, Owns the Moon?

Thursday 22 August 14:45 - 15:45

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Humanity doesn’t have the best track record when it comes to sharing. So it’s reasonable to feel uneasy knowing the world’s superpowers have set their sights on the moon as the answer to our dwindling resources. In a fascinating, urgently needed...
 

Andrew J Scott & Jonathan White: Long Term Futures

Thursday 22 August 17:45 - 18:45

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What happens to society when today’s problems blind us from irreversible future issues? Jonathan White joins us to look at how we must tackle current political and economic concerns with a commitment to the long-term to keep our future hopeful.
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How do you capture the essence of a person through biography? Patrick Barkham revives the voice of Roger Deakin, founder of the wild swimming movement, in The Swimmer. He’s joined by Jonathan Watts, who recounts the intimate conversations he had with...
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From batch cooking, one-pan meals, and recipe boxes to slow food, seasonal eating, and simple ingredients: the way we eat, just as much as what we’re eating, reveals so much about who we are (both individually and as a society). Hear Rukmini Iyer,...
 

Mona Chalabi: Humanizing Data

Friday 23 August 17:00 - 18:00

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Numbers tell stories, and Pulitzer-Prize winning data journalist Mona Chalabi’s skill lies in telling them in ways that get people talking. Through illustration, words, and sound, Chalabi makes the intangible tangible – like in March 2024’s...
 

Camilla Grudova & So Mayer: The New Weird

Friday 23 August 20:15 - 21:15

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The Coiled Serpent by Camilla Grudova takes on the absurdity of tradition, labour, and Britishness with humour and horror. So Mayer is no longer able to appear in this event and it will go ahead with Camilla Grudova in conversation with Eris Young..
 

John Vaillant: Violent Delights and Violent Ends

Sunday 25 August 10:30 - 11:30

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‘The wildfire equivalent of Hurricane Katrina’ is how John Vaillant describes the 2016 blaze that ripped through Canada’s Fort McMurray: a fire so hot, concrete vaporised and over 80,000 people fled their homes in one day. Winner of 2023’s...
 

Generations: Liz Lochhead and Henry Bell

Sunday 25 August 11:45 - 12:45

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Poet, playwright, and (dare we say it) national treasure, Liz Lochhead recently celebrated the 50th anniversary of her landmark collection Memo for Spring, and released a new collection, A Handsel. 15 years ago, teenage poet Henry Bell walked into her...
 

Jonathan Watts: The Life and Legacy of James Lovelock

Sunday 25 August 15:45 - 16:45

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What was it like to interview one of Britian’s greatest minds? Jonathan Watts, global environment editor at the Guardian, joins chair Paul French to discuss the in-depth conversations he had with the late scientist and environmentalist James Lovelock.
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Bestselling writer and Booker Prize-winner Bernardine Evaristo is known for championing new and emerging writers and voices. As part of our Generations series, join Evaristo as she speaks with author Ayesha Harruna Attah (author of books including...