“…Interrogating these boundaries is also important for understanding how nationalist imaginaries are shifting with the contemporary climate crisis, as all visions of environmental futures are rooted in context-dependent discourses that prominently include nationalism (Conversi, 2020b; Conversi and Friis Hau, 2021; Dalby, 2020; Koch, 2014, 2022, forthcoming; Ridanpää, 2022). Scholarship on the geographies of nationalism and the future (and the past/future binary) could thus join the growing body of research on “anticipatory politics” and the situated environmental imaginaries that they draw upon and inscribe (Anson, 2020; Barker, 2020; Cassegård and Thörn, 2018; DeBoom, 2021; Ferdoush and Väätänen 2022; Ferry, 2016; Granjou et al, 2017; Grove, 2021; Groves, 2017; Horn, 2018; Methmann and Rothe, 2012; Swyngedouw, 2010, 2013). But as this work shows, the temporal geographies that are invoked and imagined as relevant in discussions about climate change do not negate the relevance of a past/future divide, but rather politicize that boundary—often in a high-stakes manner, as it is called into negotiations of guilt and responsibility for addressing today's most pressing environmental challenges.…”